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  • 4.00 Credits

    Current sources, differential and multistage amplifiers; circuits with ideal and non-ideal operational amplifiers; low and high band frequency response, feedback, stability, gain and phase margin of amplifiers; output stages, class A and push-pull; monolithic operational amplifier; oscillators; transistors as switches and introduction to digital electronic circuits. Laboratory. (Offered in the spring semester only.) Prerequisites: EE 2220 and EE 3310.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Current sources, differential and multistage amplifiers; circuits with ideal and non-ideal operational amplifiers; low and high band frequency response, feedback, stability, gain and phase margin of amplifiers; output stages, class A and push-pull; monolithic operational amplifier; oscillators; transistors as switches and introduction to digital electronic circuits. Concurrent with EE 3332 (Laboratory). Prerequisites: (EE 3310 or EE 3311) and EE 2220. (Offered spring semester only)
  • 1.00 Credits

    Hands on interactive laboratory investigation of transistor switching circuits, differential amplifiers, current sources, amplifier frequency response, feedback, output stages, and oscillators. Prerequisites: EE 3312 and EE 3331 concurrently (offered spring semester only).
  • 4.00 Credits

    Polyphase circuits; ferromagnetic circuits and devices; single phase and polyphase transformers; basic electromechanical energy conversion; steady state characteristics and application of DC machines, AC synchronous and induction machines; fractional-horsepower AC motors. Includes laboratory. Prerequisite: ES2210 or ES2215 and ES2216.
  • 3.00 Credits

    A general approach to scientific research and graduate school preparation. Topics will include: finding a research mentor, literature search skills, using the scientific method for approaching a research problem and developing a research methodology, writing a research funding proposal, delivering a research presentation and selecting and applying for graduate school. Restricted to College of Engineering Honors Program students. Cross listed with ARE/ATSC/CE/CHE/COSC/ES/PETE 3890. Prerequisite: sophomore standing.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Object-oriented programming using suitable programming languages. Applications in electrical engineering and data structures (stacks, queues, lists, binary trees, hash tables). Credit may not be applied to undergraduate programs in the computer science department. Prerequisite: ES/COSC 3070 or consent of the instructor.
  • 4.00 Credits

    Introduction to the fundamentals of practical engineering programming, using specific applications of numerical methods to demonstrate these principles. The use of an object oriented approach using C++ in an efficient manner is emphasized. Other solution approaches, including C and Matlab will be discussed as appropriate. Prerequisites:MATH 2205 and (COSC 1010, COSC 1015, or ES 1060) and (MATH 2250 or MATH 2310) or consent of instructor.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Fundamentals of probability and statistics for engineers; reliability in engineering systems; random processes, statistical estimation, auto/cross correlation and power spectral density functions and linear filtering of random signals. Prerequisites: MATH 2210 and EE 3220. EE 3220 may be taken concurrently.
  • 2.00 Credits

    Recursive and non-recursive filter design using Parks-McClellan, bilinear transform and other methods. Practical design aspects including digital filter realization, effects of quantization, stability and efficiency. Prerequisite: EE 3220. (Normally offered once a year)
  • 2.00 Credits

    Sampling, aliasing and windowing; A/D and D/A conversion; applications of the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) and fast Fourier transform (FFT) algorithms; correlation, periodogram methods of spectral estimation and other topics in digital signal processing. Prerequisite: EE 3220.