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  2. Yield (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yield_(engineering)

    Proportionality limit Up to this amount of stress, stress is proportional to strain (Hooke's law), so the stress-strain graph is a straight line, and the gradient will be equal to the elastic modulus of the material. Elastic limit (yield strength) Beyond the elastic limit, permanent deformation will occur.

  3. Input offset voltage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Input_offset_voltage

    The input offset voltage is a parameter defining the differential DC voltage required between the inputs of an amplifier, especially an operational amplifier (op-amp), to make the output zero (for voltage amplifiers, 0 volts with respect to ground or between differential outputs, depending on the output type).

  4. Carbon offsets and credits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_offsets_and_credits

    An offset project is designed by project developers, financed by investors, validated by an independent verifier, and registered with a carbon offset program. Official registration indicates that a program has approved the project and that the project is eligible to start generating carbon offset credits once it starts. [ 116 ]

  5. Half-precision floating-point format - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half-precision_floating...

    The half-precision binary floating-point exponent is encoded using an offset-binary representation, with the zero offset being 15; also known as exponent bias in the IEEE 754 standard. [9] E min = 00001 2 − 01111 2 = −14; E max = 11110 2 − 01111 2 = 15; Exponent bias = 01111 2 = 15

  6. Operational amplifier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operational_amplifier

    This offset voltage can create offsets or drifting in the operational amplifier. Input offset voltage Input offset voltage is a voltage required across the op amp's input terminals to drive the output voltage to zero. [9] [nb 3] In the perfect amplifier, there would be no input offset voltage. However, it exists because of imperfections in the ...

  7. Band offset - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Band_offset

    In this theory, the band offset is the sum of two terms, the first term is intrinsic and depends solely on the bulk properties, the second term, which vanishes for isovalent and abrupt non-polar heterojunctions, depends on the interface geometry, and can easily be calculated once the geometry is known, as well as certain quantities (such as the ...

  8. Frequency deviation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frequency_deviation

    The term is sometimes mistakenly used as synonymous with frequency drift, which is an unintended offset of an oscillator from its nominal frequency. The frequency deviation of a radio is of particular importance in relation to bandwidth, because less deviation means that more channels can fit into the same amount of frequency spectrum.

  9. Integral windup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integral_windup

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