300+ [UPDATED] Analogue Electronics Interview Questions and Answers

Q1. Which Statements Is Certainly True About Two Capacitors That Have Been Charged In Parallel?

Each capacitor has the same voltage drop.

Q2. How Is The Charge Stored In A Capacitor Related To The Voltage Applied To The Capacitor?

The charge is proportional to the applied voltage.

Q3. In What Form Is The Energy Stored In A Charged Capacitor?

The energy is stored as an electric field.

Q4. When A Series Rlc Circuit Is Driven At Resonance, How Does The Impedance Of The Circuit Compare To The Resistance In The Circuit?

The impedance is equal to the resistance.

Q5. How Does The Total Capacitance Of Two Capacitors Arranged Together In Parallel Compare To The Individual Capacitances Of Each?

The total capacitance is greater than either of the individual capacitances.

Q6. What Is Fan Out?

In digital electronics, the fan-out of a logic gate output is the number of gate inputs it can drive.

In most designs, logic gates are connected to form more complex circuits. While no logic gate input can be fed by more than one output, it is common for one output to be connected to several inputs. The technology used to implement logic gates usually allows a certain number of gate inputs to be wired directly together without additional interfacing circuitry. The maximum fan-out of an output measures its load-driving capability: it is the greatest number of inputs of gates of the same type to which the output can be safely connected.

Q7. Which Applications Is A Typical Use For A Trformer?

changing the voltage of an alternating-current signal.

Q8. What Is Meta Stability?

Metastability in electronics is the ability of a digital electronics system to persist for an unbounded time in an unstable equilibrium or metastable state. In metastable states, the circuit may be unable to settle into a stable ‘0’ or ‘1’ logic level within the time required for proper circuit operation.

Q9. What Is Characteristic Impedance?

The characteristic impedance or surge impedance (usually written Z0) of a uniform trmission line is the ratio of the amplitudes of voltage and current of a single wave propagating along the line; that is, a wave travelling in one direction in the absence of reflections in the other direction.

Q10. In An Alternating-current Circuit, What Is The Relationship Between The Impedance Of An Inductor And The Frequency Of The Current?

The impedance increases with frequency.

Q11. What Does Mosfet Stand For?

Metal-oxide-semiconductor-field-effect-tristor.

Q12. Under What Physical Conditions Is Magnetic Energy Stored In An Inductor?

when current is flowing through the inductor.

Q13. What Is Bias?

The application of electric voltage to a P-N junction is known as Bias.

Q14. What Is The Use Of The Load Line?

Load line is used in the graphical analysis of non-linear circuits.

Q15. In A Circuit Consisting Of A Battery In Parallel With Two Identical Parallel Resistors, How Do The Currents Through The Two Resistors Compare?

The same amount of current flows through each resistor.

Q16. What Does A Q-point Of A Tristor Indicate?

The collector-emitter current with no input.

Q17. What Is Gain Bandwidth Product?

The gain–bandwidth product (designated as GBWP, GBW, GBP or GB) for an amplifier is the product of the amplifier’s bandwidth and the gain at which the bandwidth is measured.

Q18. Which Is True About The Resistance In A “short Circuit?”

A short circuit has very little resistance.

Q19. What Is Signal Integrity?

Signal integrity or SI is a set of measures of the quality of an electrical signal. In digital electronics, a stream of binary values is represented by a voltage (or current) waveform.

Q20. What Is Tri-state Logic?

In digital electronics three-state, tri-state, or 3-state logic allows an output port to assume a high impedance state in addition to the 0 and 1 logic levels, effectively removing the output from the circuit.

Q21. What Is Sample And Hold Circuit?

In electronics, a sample and hold (S/H, also “follow-and-hold”) circuit is an analog device that samples (captures, grabs) the voltage of a continuously varying analog signal and holds (locks, freezes) its value at a constant level for a specified minimum period of time.

Q22. What Is Lvdt?

The linear variable differential trformer (LVDT) (also called linear variable displacement trformer, linear variable displacement trducer, or simply differential trformer) is a type of electrical trformer used for measuring linear displacement (position).

Q23. What Is Frequency Modulation?

frequency modulation technique is the frequency of a carrier signal varied according to the amplitude of an information-bearing signal.

Q24. What Is Breakdown Voltage?

The voltage at which a Zener diode starts conducting when reverse biased is called Breakdown Voltage.

Q25. Define Settling Time Of Op Amp?

Op Amp Settling Time. SETTLING TIME. The settling time of an amplifier is defined as the time it takes the output to respond to a step change of input and come into, and remain within a defined error band, as measured relative to the 50% point of the input pulse.

Q26. Which Components Form A Darlington Pair?

Two bipolar tristors.

Q27. In An Alternating-current Circuit, What Is The Relationship Between The Impedance Of A Capacitor And The Frequency Of The Current?

The impedance decreases with frequency.

Q28. In A Series Circuit Consisting Of A Battery And Two Identical Resistors, How Do The Currents Through The Two Resistors Compare?

The same amount of current flows through each resistor.

Q29. How Does The Total Capacitance Of Two Capacitors Arranged Together In Series Compare To The Individual Capacitances Of Each?

The total capacitance is less than either of the individual capacitances.

Q30. What Is Noise Margin?

In electrical engineering, noise margin is the amount by which a signal exceeds the minimum amount for proper operation.

It is commonly used in at least two contexts:
In a digital circuit, the noise margin is the amount by which the signal exceeds the threshold for a proper ‘0’ or ‘1’.

Q31. What Is A Relaxation Oscillator?

In electronics a relaxation oscillator is a nonlinear electronic oscillator circuit that produces a nonsinusoidal repetitive output signal, such as a triangle wave or square wave. The period of the oscillator depends on the time constant of the capacitor or inductor circuit.