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Can someone please explain me A-scan and B-scan in ultrasound? :/
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and how the amount of smoothing is increased?ppl give me a simple defination of smoothing...?
ppl give me a simple defination of smoothing...?
The B-scan technique basically combines a series of A-scans, taken from a range of different angles, toCan someone please explain me A-scan and B-scan in ultrasound? :/
the process by which there is less variations in the output by creating small ripples across the peaks of the waves.ppl give me a simple defination of smoothing...?
Simple, no contradiction. Both cases, the capacitor is parallel to the load.Mark scheme contradicting.
Check this outView attachment 9367
answer to june 2002 6biii) in which how a capacitor can be used in smoothing is by connecting a capacitor across SQ.
but answer to another same question in another year(which i don't exactly remember when) says connect capacitor parallel to the load (resistor)
but both ms does not give the alternative answers (to each other)
what is correct?
Increasing capacitance of capacitor parallel to resistorand how the amount of smoothing is increased?
The B-scan technique basically combines a series of A-scans, taken from a range of different angles, to
form a two-dimensional picture. As before, each A-scan corresponds to a single ultrasound pulse being
emitted by the transducer and producing a series of reflected pulses from boundaries within the body.
the process by which there is less variations in the output by creating small ripples across the peaks of the waves.
noooo...dont write increase the Resistance,...u wont get mark...chect o/n 2009 ms ppr41 Q7ci...Simple, no contradiction. Both cases, the capacitor is parallel to the load.
Increasing capacitance of capacitor parallel to resistor
Increasing resistance of resistor!
because they do not want you to alter the circuit.noooo...dont write increase the Resistance,...u wont get mark...chect o/n 2009 ms ppr41 Q7ci...
which year?
hmmm ok...because they do not want you to alter the circuit.
Increasing resistance does increase smoothing!
Smoothing is reduction in the variation of the power output ....ppl give me a simple defination of smoothing...?
assalamoalaikum wr wb!
*PHEW*assalamoalaikum wr wb!
the graph above was correct
see we know it's gonna be negative gradient...right?
the dotted line represents the gradient..
when we take negative of it..it's gonna be reflection abt the time axis..
so this one's supposed to be correct..
i got confused with the gradient part..but it's gonna be like below...cuz for a sin curve the gradient is a cosine curve...hence it gonna be this way :
View attachment 9383
haha yeah....it got me confused too..then i took a moment to do it again myself..and worked this way..and finally got the answer which makes sense Alhumdulilah..*PHEW*
Yes that makes more sense. The user "StoneBridge" really seemed to argue alot that this is wrong. I wonder about his point of view.
I think you need to review non-inverting amplifiers.please help me solve this! http://www.xtremepapers.com/papers/CIE/Cambridge International A and AS Level/Physics (9702)/9702_s10_qp_42.pdf
Q9 B 2.... how come resistor "R" is the input resistor? the circuit is not showing anything like that.
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