Reference Notes Introduction To Electrical Engineering
Reference Notes Introduction To Electrical Engineering
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
Electrical engineering has now subdivided into a wide range of subfields including
electronics, digital computers, power engineering, telecommunications, control
systems, RF engineering, signal processing, instrumentation, and microelectronics.
The subject of electronic engineering is often treated as its own subfield but it
intersects with all the other subfields, including the power electronics of power
engineering.
Electrical engineers work in a very wide range of industries and the skills required
are likewise variable. These range from basic circuit theory to the management
skills required of project manager. The tools and equipment that an individual
engineer may need are similarly variable, ranging from a simple voltmeter to a top
end analyzer to sophisticated design and manufacturing software.
History
Electricity has been a subject of scientific interest since at least the early 17th
century. The first electrical engineer was probably William Gilbert who designed
the versorium: a device that detected the presence of statically charged objects. He
was also the first to draw a clear distinction between magnetism and static
electricity and is credited with establishing the term electricity. In 1775 Alessandro
Volta's scientific experimentations devised the electrophorus, a device that
produced a static electric charge, and by 1800 Volta developed the voltaic pile, a
forerunner of the electric battery.
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19th century
Beginning in the 1830s, efforts were made to apply electricity to practical use in
the telegraph. By the end of the 19th century the world had been forever changed
by the rapid communication made possible by engineering development of land-
lines, submarine cables, and, from about 1890, wireless telegraphy.
Practical applications and advances in such fields created an increasing need for
standardized units of measure. They led to the international standardization of the
units volt, ampere, coulomb, ohm, farad, and henry. This was achieved at an
international conference in Chicago 1893. The publication of these standards
formed the basis of future advances in standardisation in various industries, and in
many countries the definitions were immediately recognised in relevant legislation.
During these years, the study of electricity was largely considered to be a subfield
of physics. It was not until about 1885 that universities and institutes of technology
such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Cornell University
started to offer bachelor's degrees in electrical engineering. The Darmstadt
University of Technology founded the first department of electrical engineering in
the world in 1882. In that same year, under Professor Charles Cross at MIT began
offering the first option of electrical engineering within its physics department. In
1883, Darmstadt University of Technology and Cornell University introduced the
world's first bachelor's degree courses of study in electrical engineering, and in
1885 the University College London founded the first chair of electrical
engineering in Great Britain. The University of Missouri established the first
department of electrical engineering in the United States in 1886. Several other
schools soon followed suit, including Cornell and the Georgia School of
Technology in Atlanta, Georgia.
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In 1897, Karl Ferdinand Braun introduced the cathode ray tube as part of an
oscilloscope, a crucial enabling technology for electronic television. John Fleming
invented the first radio tube, the diode, in 1904. Two years later, Robert von
Lieben and Lee De Forest independently developed the amplifier tube, called the
triode.
In 1920 Albert Hull developed the magnetron which would eventually lead to the
development of the microwave oven in 1946 by Percy Spencer. In 1934 the British
military began to make strides toward radar (which also uses the magnetron) under
the direction of Dr Wimperis, culminating in the operation of the first radar station
at Bawdsey in August 1936.
In 1941 Konrad Zuse presented the Z3, the world's first fully functional and
programmable computer using electromechanical parts. In 1943 Tommy Flowers
designed and built the Colossus, the world's first fully functional, electronic, digital
and programmable computer. In 1946 the ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator
and Computer) of John Presper Eckert and John Mauchly followed, beginning the
computing era. The arithmetic performance of these machines allowed engineers to
develop completely new technologies and achieve new objectives, including the
Apollo program which culminated in landing astronauts on the Moon.
Solid-state transistors
The invention of the transistor in late 1947 by William B. Shockley, John Bardeen,
and Walter Brattain of the Bell Telephone Laboratories opened the door for more
compact devices and led to the development of the integrated circuit in 1958 by
Jack Kilby and independently in 1959 by Robert Noyce. Starting in 1968, Ted Hoff
and a team at the Intel Corporation invented the first commercial microprocessor,
which foreshadowed the personal computer. The Intel 4004 was a four-bit
processor released in 1971, but in 1973 the Intel 8080, an eight-bit processor, made
the first personal computer, the Altair 8800, possible.
Control
Control systems play a critical role in space flight. Control engineering focuses on
the modeling of a diverse range of dynamic systems and the design of controllers
that will cause these systems to behave in the desired manner. To implement such
controllers electrical engineers may use electrical circuits, digital signal processors,
microcontrollers and PLCs (Programmable Logic Controllers). Control
engineering has a wide range of applications from the flight and propulsion
systems of commercial airliners to the cruise control present in many modern
automobiles. It also plays an important role in industrial automation.
Control engineers often utilize feedback when designing control systems. For
example, in an automobile with cruise control the vehicle's speed is continuously
monitored and fed back to the system which adjusts the motor's power output
accordingly. Where there is regular feedback, control theory can be used to
determine how the system responds to such feedback.
Prior to the Second World War, the subject was commonly known as radio
engineering and basically was restricted to aspects of communications and radar,
commercial radio and early television. Later, in post war years, as consumer
devices began to be developed, the field grew to include modern television, audio
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systems, computers and microprocessors. In the mid-to-late 1950s, the term radio
engineering gradually gave way to the name electronic engineering.
Before the invention of the integrated circuit in 1959, electronic circuits were
constructed from discrete components that could be manipulated by humans. These
discrete circuits consumed much space and power and were limited in speed,
although they are still common in some applications. By contrast, integrated
circuits packed a large number—often millions—of tiny electrical components,
mainly transistors, into a small chip around the size of a coin. This allowed for the
powerful computers and other electronic devices we see today.
Signal processing Signal processing deals with the analysis and manipulation of
signals. Signals can be either analog, in which case the signal varies continuously
according to the information, or digital, in which case the signal varies according
to a series of discrete values representing the information. For analog signals,
signal processing may involve the amplification and filtering of audio signals for
audio equipment or the modulation and demodulation of signals for
telecommunications. For digital signals, signal processing may involve the
compression, error detection and error correction of digitally sampled signals.
Signal Processing is a very mathematically oriented and intensive area forming the
core of digital signal processing and it is rapidly expanding with new applications
in every field of electrical engineering such as communications, control, radar,
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DSP processor ICs are found in every type of modern electronic systems and
products including, SDTV | HDTV sets, radios and mobile communication
devices, Hi-Fi audio equipment, Dolby noise reduction algorithms, GSM mobile
phones, mp3 multimedia players, camcorders and digital cameras, automobile
control systems, noise cancelling headphones, digital spectrum analyzers,
intelligent missile guidance, radar, GPS based cruise control systems and all kinds
of image processing, video processing, audio processing and speech processing
systems.
Instrumentation Flight instruments provide pilots with the tools to control aircraft
analytically. Instrumentation engineering deals with the design of devices to
measure physical quantities such as pressure, flow and temperature. The design of
such instrumentation requires a good understanding of physics that often extends
beyond electromagnetic theory. For example, flight instruments measure variables
such as wind speed and altitude to enable pilots the control of aircraft analytically.
Similarly, thermocouples use the Peltier-Seebeck effect to measure the temperature
difference between two points.
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Often instrumentation is not used by itself, but instead as the sensors of larger
electrical systems. For example, a thermocouple might be used to help ensure a
furnace's temperature remains constant. For this reason, instrumentation
engineering is often viewed as the counterpart of control engineering.