CIRCUITS LABORATORY EXPERIMENT 3 AC Circuit Analysis 3.1 Introduction The steady-state behavior of circuits energized by sinusoidal sources is an important area of study for several reasons. First‚ the generation‚ transmission‚ distribution‚ and consumption of electric energy occur under essentially sinusoidal steady-state conditions. Second‚ an understanding of sinusoidal behavior makes possible the prediction of circuit behavior when nonsinusoidal sources are used through the use of techniques
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how much of good y does the bundle C contain? 3. Consider the following four consumers (C1 ‚ C2 ‚ C3 ‚ C4 ) with the following utility functions: Consumer C1 C2 C3 C4 Utility Function u(x‚ y) = 3x + 2y 1 2 u(x‚ y) = x 3 y 3 u(x‚ y) = min(3x‚ y) u(x‚ y) = min(2x‚ 2y) On the appropriate graph below‚ draw each consumer’s indifferent curves through the following points: (2‚2)‚ (4‚4)‚ (6‚6) and (8‚8). C1 C2 10
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A preliminary version of this paper appears in the proceedings of Eurocrypt 2013. This is the full version. Message-Locked Encryption and Secure Deduplication Mihir Bellare1 Sriram Keelveedhi2 Thomas Ristenpart3 March 2013 Abstract We formalize a new cryptographic primitive‚ Message-Locked Encryption (MLE)‚ where the key under which encryption and decryption are performed is itself derived from the message. MLE provides a way to achieve secure deduplication (space-efficient secure outsourced
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Theoretical Study: 1) Definitions: a. Definition of titration: Volumetric titration consists of the addition of a determined volume of titrating solution with known concentration C1 to an exact volume of solution with unknown concentration C2 to be determined. Volumetric titration is based on a reaction‚ which occurs between the titrating
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Edexcel GCSE Additional Science Unit ASCA: Additional Science Controlled Assessment Controlled Assessment Task C2 Valid from June XXXX to May XXXX Paper Reference(s) 5SA04/01 Chemistry Unit CCA: Chemistry Controlled Assessment Controlled Assessment Task C2 Valid from June XXXX to May XXXX Paper Reference(s) 5CH04/01 These controlled assessment tasks are valid from June XXXX to May XXXX. • For assessment in January XXXX centres must submit their moderation sample(s) by 10
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Chapter 26 Problems 1‚ 2‚ 3 = straightforward‚ intermediate‚ challenging Section 26.1 Definition of Capacitance 1. (a) How much charge is on each plate of a 4.00-μF capacitor when it is connected to a 12.0-V battery? (b) If this same capacitor is connected to a 1.50-V battery‚ what charge is stored? 2. Two conductors having net charges of +10.0 μC and –10.0 μC have a potential difference of 10.0 V between them. (a) Determine the capacitance of the system. (b) What is the potential
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Abstract: The main aim of this assignment is to design a pre amplifier circuit with an NPN transistor to be used in a simple public address (PA) system. The pre amplifier is fed from a microphone that produces an average output voltage of 10 mV rms. The amplifier is to operate over a frequency range of 300 Hz to 5 kHz and should have an adjustable volume control. The expected gain of the amplifier is 100. First we are going to design an amplifier for given specifications‚ model the operation of the
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The Real Story Behind the Real Thing: When Pharmacist John Pemberton invented Coke in 1886‚ it was the original energy drink claiming to have restorative powers. The original ingredients of Coke also included a small amount of Cocaine‚ but this was eliminated from the ingredients in 1903. Coca-Cola is made of water‚ sugar‚ a few secret flavors and some bubbles. But behind the product itself is where marketing has played a key role in Coca-Cola’s domination of the market place. Coca-Cola promises
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Solution to Tutorial 1 2011/2012 Semester I MA4264 Tutor: Xiang Sun∗ August 24‚ 2011 Game Theory 1 Review • “Static” means one-shot‚ or simultaneous-move; “Complete information” means that the payoff functions are common knowledge. • Normal-form representation: G = {S1 ‚ . . . ‚ Sn ; u1 ‚ . . . ‚ un }‚ where n is finite. • si is strictly dominated by si ‚ if ui (si ‚ s−i ) < ui (si ‚ s−i )‚ ∀s−i ∈ S−i . • Rational players do not play strictly dominated strategies‚ since they are always not
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THE SPECIAL THEORY OF RELATIVITY Lecture Notes prepared by J D Cresser Department of Physics Macquarie University July 31‚ 2003 CONTENTS 1 Contents 1 Introduction: What is Relativity? 2 Frames of Reference 2.1 2.2 A Framework of Rulers and Clocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 5 5 7 7 9 9 Inertial Frames of Reference and Newton’s First Law of Motion 3 The Galilean Transformation 4 Newtonian Force and Momentum 4.1 4.2 Newton’s Second Law of Motion
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