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An operational amplifier (often op amp or opamp) is a DC-coupled electronic voltage amplifier with a differential input, a (usually) single-ended output, [1] and an extremely high gain. Its name comes from its original use of performing mathematical operations in analog computers .
Date/Time Thumbnail Dimensions User Comment; current: 04:14, 26 January 2009: 300 × 125 (26 KB): Inductiveload {{Information |Description=A circuit diagram of a en:non-inverting amplifier made using an en:operational amplifier.
English: A circuit diagram of an integrating amplifier made using an operational amplifier. Italiano: Diagramma circuitale di un amplificatore operazionale configurato come integratore. Español: Diagrama circuital de un es:amplificador operacional configurado como integrador
Figure 5: Op-amp differential amplifier. An operational amplifier, or op-amp, is a differential amplifier with very high differential-mode gain, very high input impedance, and low output impedance. An op-amp differential amplifier can be built with predictable and stable gain by applying negative feedback (Figure 5).
Basic opamp diode log amplifier. The basic opamp diode log amplifier shown in the diagram utilizes the diode's exponential current-voltage relationship for the opamp's negative feedback path, with the diode's anode virtually grounded and its cathode connected to the opamp's output , used as the circuit output.
The operational amplifier integrator is an electronic integration circuit. Based on the operational amplifier (op-amp), it performs the mathematical operation of integration with respect to time; that is, its output voltage is proportional to the input voltage integrated over time.
File:Op-Amp Inverting Amplifier.svg. Add languages. ... A circuit diagram of a inverting amplifier made using an operational amplifier. = ...
Many commercial op-amp offerings provide a method for tuning the operational amplifier to balance the inputs (e.g., "offset null" or "balance" pins that can interact with an external voltage source attached to a potentiometer). Alternatively, a tunable external voltage can be added to one of the inputs in order to balance out the offset effect.