
Circuit analysis | Electrical engineering - Khan Academy
Circuit analysis is the process of finding all the currents and voltages in a network of connected components. We look at the basic elements used to build circuits, and find out what happens …
Circuit analysis overview (article) | Khan Academy
Circuit analysis, or solving a circuit, means figuring out voltages and currents in each element. Here's an overview of circuit analysis, with some context for the various tools and methods we …
Linearity (article) | DC circuit analysis | Khan Academy
Course: Electrical engineering > Unit 2 Lesson 3: DC circuit analysis ... Labeling voltages Application of the fundamental laws (setup) Application of the fundamental laws (solve)
AC analysis intro 1 (video) | Khan Academy
Solving circuits with differential equations is hard. If we limit ourselves to sinusoidal input signals, a whole new method of AC analysis emerges. Created by Willy McAllister.
Electrical engineering | Science | Khan Academy
Learn about electricity, circuit theory, and introductory electronics. We also have sections that let you get down and dirty with household items, from building your own robot to videos where we …
Advanced circuit analysis (practice) | Khan Academy
Practice analyzing circuits with series and parallel resistors using Kirchhoff's laws and Ohm's law.
Superposition (article) | Circuit analysis | Khan Academy
With the principle of superposition you can simplify the analysis of circuits with multiple inputs. Written by Willy McAllister.
AC analysis intro 2 (video) | Khan Academy
Here's a preview of how AC analysis is going to work. To get ready we need to review some of the ideas from trig and complex numbers.
Circuit terminology (article) | Khan Academy
We are developing methods for analyzing a circuit. So far we've defined the most common components (resistor, capacitor, and inductor) and sources (voltage and current). Now we …
Simplifying resistor networks (article) | Khan Academy
Learn how to combine series and parallel resistors to reduce the complexity of a circuit.