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Course Introduction

Course Introduction. ENTC 210: Circuit Analysis I Rohit Singhal Lecturer Texas A&M University. Instructor. Office: F111B, Fermier Hall. E-mail: rohit@entc.tamu.edu Telephone: (979) 845-3215 Message: (979) 845-5966 Office Hours: MWF, 1:30 – 2:45 PM, or by appointment.

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Course Introduction

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  1. Course Introduction ENTC 210: Circuit Analysis I Rohit Singhal Lecturer Texas A&M University

  2. Instructor • Office: F111B, Fermier Hall. • E-mail: rohit@entc.tamu.edu • Telephone: (979) 845-3215 • Message: (979) 845-5966 • Office Hours: MWF, 1:30 – 2:45 PM, or by appointment

  3. Announcements • No Laboratory this week • Send me an e-mail • Subject Line: “ENTC 210 Student”

  4. Prerequisite • Successful completion of Math 151, with a grade of C or better.

  5. Course Description • ENTC210 is a course on circuit analysis. Electric and Magnetic principles of components used in DC circuits; transient analysis; Ohm’s and Kirchhoff’s laws, Thevenin’s and Norton’s theorems, mesh and nodal equations; phasor analysis of networks; measurement of current, voltage and waveforms with meters and oscilloscopes. Students perform both circuit analysis and circuit design. (credits: 4)

  6. The Purpose of this Course By the end of this course the student will be able to • Identify and apply the concepts of DC electrical current, voltage, power, resistance, capacitance and inductance. • Analyze series, parallel and combination circuits using Ohm’s law, Joule’s law, Kirchhoff’s laws, Voltage Divider rule, Current divider rule, Mesh and nodal analysis. • Analyze series-parallel circuits, including bridge networks, using Thevenin, Norton, Superposition, and Maximum power Transfer. • Analyze the transient response of circuits with capacitors and inductors. Identify the parameters in sinusoidal AC waveforms. • Implement and test DC circuit analysis.

  7. Textbooks • Introductory Circuit Analysis • Robert Boylestad

  8. Class Web & ftp Sites • Class website: Announcements, syllabus, course calendar, lab procedures, lab e-mail link, lectures and notes will be posted at: http://etidweb.tamu.edu/classes/entc210/ • You are responsible for knowing all the announcements and exam schedule.

  9. Attendance • Regular lecture attendance is recommended but not required. • If you choose not to attend regularly scheduled classes and labs, you are still responsible for anything you miss—announcements, quizzes, etc.

  10. Student Evaluation Quizzes 100 Homework 100 Laboratory 100 Exams 200 Total 500

  11. Quizzes • Random, Unannounced. • Points from the 10 best Quizzes will be considered for each student.

  12. Assignment Requirements • This pertains to homework, laboratory write ups and any other assignments that have deadlines: • Late assignments will not be accepted. • Non-laboratory assignments are due at the beginning of lecture. • Sloppy or disorganized work will adversely affect your grade.

  13. Exams • Attendance is mandatory. • Make-up exam are not given unless • permission is obtained prior to exam day from the instructor • a valid, documented emergency has arisen

  14. Laboratory • All laboratory work must be completed to meet the minimum requirements for passing this course.

  15. Aggie Honor System • Aggie Honor Code: An Aggie does not lie, cheat, or steal or tolerate those who do

  16. Aggie Honor System • Collaboration and information sharing are characteristics of a university education. • Academic integrity is essential for academic pursuits and accurate recognition of achievement. • Academic integrity is violated when a student’s conduct involves dishonesty and methods to gain an unfair advantage.

  17. Academic Dishonesty • cheating • fabrication • falsification • multiple submissions • plagiarism • complicity • DEFINITIONS of these are at: http://www.tamu.edu/aggiehonor/acadmisconduct.htm

  18. Homework • Send me e-mail • Subject Line: “ENTC 210 Student” • Visit http://www.tamu.edu/aggiehonor/acadmisconduct.htm

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