Thursday 13 September 2012

GATE2012ECE(5)

GATE 2012 ECE paper fully solved.Step by step, detailed solutions are given.Corrections and suggestions are appreciated. 

For reference material, quote the question and send a mail to arunsblog4ece@gmail.com.


25)  The electric field of a uniform plane electromagnetic wave in free space, along the positive
x direction, is given by
$$ \overrightarrow{E}=10(a_{y}+ja_{z})e^{-j25x}$$
The frequency and polarization of the wave, respectively, are

(A) 1.2 GHz and left circular           (B) 4 Hz and left circular
(C) 1.2 GHz and right circular         (D) 4 Hz and right circular

Solution
E(r) = E0 e-jβx for a wave travelling in +x direction
β = 25

velocity, v = ω/ β

or           ω = v β

            2πf = v β

               f = v β / 2π

                 = (3 * 108 * 25) / 2π

                 = 1.2 GHz (approx)

Electric field has two components Ey and Ez both of magnitude 10, but Ez  is out of phase from Ey by 90o .
Therefore in trigonometric form they can be represented as

Ey = E0 cos(ωt - βx)

Ez = - E0 sin(ωt - βx)

Er = √(Ey2 + Ez2)

Substituting (ωt - βx) = 0, 45o, 90o ... we can see that resultant phasor is rotating in clockwise direction and therefore left circular polarization




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26)  In the following figure, C1 and C2 are ideal capacitors. C1 has been charged to 12 V before the ideal switch S is closed at t = 0. The current i(t) for all t is

 

(A) zero                                                 (B) a step function
(C) an exponentially decaying function     (D) an impulse function

Solution


At t = 0+ , ie when the switch is closed capacitors act as short circuits, with 12V across C1 as voltage source. Since impedance is zero, current = voltage / impedance  = 12V / 0 = infinity or an impulse.

Later on both capacitors will be at same voltage, since they are in parallel and there will not be any current flow.

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27)  The voltage gain v A of the circuit shown below is



     

Solution

The circuit shown is a Common Emitter amplifier with collector feedback.Since feedback is from collector it will be definitely be a negative feedback.

The voltage gain of negative feedback configuration can be written as


Av = - Rf / R1
Where Rf is the feedback resistance
                R1 is the input resistance

|Av|=  Rf / R1

        = 100k / 10k

         = 10
  
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