Voltage output for ideal diode (solutions wrong?)

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on a problem from a lecture PDF regarding the voltage output of an ideal diode. The input voltage is given as V_in = 10cos(2πt), but the provided graph for V_in is criticized for having an incorrect period, which affects the output voltage graph as well. Participants agree that the period is indeed wrong and question the necessity of calculating frequency when it was not required for the problem. The scaling in the graph is also noted to be incorrect, leading to confusion about the representation of the sinusoidal function. Overall, the main issue is the misrepresentation of the input voltage's time dependence in the graph.
pyroknife
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I'm looking at some solutions for a problem I found. This link is http://www.etcs.ipfw.edu/~lin/MET487/2011-SumII/Lectures/Hw3_Sols-MET487-Sum2011.PDF
It's page 4 problem 3.1.


Okay so V_in is given to be 10cos(2∏t), but their graph for V_in makes no sense to me and consequently, V_out seems wrong as well.

Am I missing something here or is their graph for V_in totally off? The magnitudes are right but their period seems a factor of 2 off.
 
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pyroknife said:
I'm looking at some solutions for a problem I found. This link is http://www.etcs.ipfw.edu/~lin/MET487/2011-SumII/Lectures/Hw3_Sols-MET487-Sum2011.PDF
It's page 4 problem 3.1.


Okay so V_in is given to be 10cos(2∏t), but their graph for V_in makes no sense to me and consequently, V_out seems wrong as well.

Am I missing something here or is their graph for V_in totally off? The magnitudes are right but their period seems a factor of 2 off.

You are right, the period is wrong.

ehild
 
ehild said:
You are right, the period is wrong.

ehild

Thanks. Any clue what they were doing by finding frequency? I don't see any point in doing that.
 
The time dependence of an AC voltage is U=Acos(ωt). The input voltage is U=10cos(2pi t). So what is the angular frequency ω? How is it related to the frequency and to the time period?
The scaling in the picture is wrong.

ehild
 
Yeah I know that the relationship between angular frequency and frequency is
angularfrequency=2*pi*frequency
and that period=1/frequency.

I just don't understand why they went through the hassle of calculating frequency to draw a simple sinusoidal graph. Frequency was never asked to be calculated, so i didn't see the point in calculating it unless they somehow saw this as an easier way of drawing a simple cosine function.
 
They needed to graph time dependence of the output voltage. (But they did it wrong)
ehild
 
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