Friday, February 24, 2012

Electronic Devices



Circuit Board

Electronic devices have circuit boards which is a collection of many circuit parts on a sheet of insulating material. It connects the parts of the circuit to supply electric current and send signals to the parts of the electronic device. The information sent to the device is converted into infrared light through a LED or light emitting diode.
 Many electronic devices use semiconductors which are substances that conduct an electric current better than an insulator does but not as well as a conductor does. The way a semiconductor works depends on how its electrons are arranged.
You can change the conductivity of a semiconductor through doping. It is the addition of an impurity to a semiconductor. Adding the impurity changes the arrangement of electrons.

There are 2 types of doped semiconductors:

*N-Type Semiconductor- when a replaced an atom with another atom results in an "extra" electron

*P-Type Semiconductor- when a replaced an atom with another atom results in a "hole" where an electron could be.

Joining both types of semiconductors results forms a diode. It is an electronic component that allows electric charge to move mainly in one direction. In a diode, where the two layers meet, some “extra” electrons from the n-type layer move to fill the “holes” in the p-type layer. Diodes can also change AC currents to DC by blocking one of the directions of the current.

          Transistors are electronic components that amplify or increase current It can be used in many circuits, including an amplifier and a switch. There are 2 types of transistors:

*NPN transistors- have a p-type layer in between two n-type layers.
*PNP transistors- have an n-type layer in between tow p-type layers.

An entire circuit that has many components on a single semiconductor is called an integrated circuit.
Integrated Circuit

Communication Technology
          Signal is anything, such as a movement, sound, or a set of numbers and letters, that can be used to send information. One signal is sent using another signal called a carrier. Two kinds of signals are: Analog signals, and digital signals. An analog signal is a signal whose properties change without a break or jump between values. Digital signal on the other hand is a signal that represented as a sequence of separate values.

          Radio and TV signals can either be analog or digital. An EM or electromagnetic wave is a wave that consists of changing electric and magnetic fields. They are used as carriers. Radio waves are one kind of EM wave. Radio stations use radio waves to carry signals that represent sound. They travel through the air, and are picked up by a radio antenna. The pictures we see on the screen of out televisions are made b electrons hitting the screen. Audio signals hold the information to make the sound. More and more TVs are going digital; the images and sound of these programs are much clearer than on televisions made for analog broadcasts. A plasma display do not use electron tubes, instead they have thousands of tiny cells with gases. The gases then are charged and it generates colored lights.

Computers
          Computers are electronic devices that perform tasks by following instructions given to it. The information given to the computer is called input while the final result is called an output. The computer processes the information given to it, which is called processing. This could mean adding a list of numbers, making a drawing, or even moving a piece of equipment.
          The first computer was called the ENIAC (Electronic Numeral Integrator and Computer). This computer is much larger than what we use today. The modern computers use microprocessors which are single semiconductor chips that control and execute a microcomputer’s instructions. Computer hardware is the parts or pieces of equipment that make up a computer. These are composed of:

*Input device- gives information, or input to the computer.
*Central processing unit- is the microprocessor; processing on the spot for storage in memory.
*Memory- used to store information.
          *ROM- is the permanent memory such as maintenance, hardware        management, and Start-ups. It cannot be changed or added to.
          *RAM- is the temporary memory. The information is lost when the power is shut off.
*Output device- such as printers, monitors, speakers etc.

Computer Software is a set of instructions or commands that tells a computer what to do. A computer program is software.

There are two kinds of software:
*Operating-system software- handles basic operations needed by the computer
*Application software- tells the computer to run a utility


The internet is a huge computer network made up of millions of computers that can all share information.  Part of the internet is called the WWW or world wide web.

Friday, February 17, 2012

Electromagnetism

Magnets are any materials that attracts iron, or any materials containing iron. The magnetic poles of a magnet are the points on a magnet that have opposite magnetic qualities. These are the north and south poles. Magnets also have magnetic force, it is the force of the attraction or repulsion generated by moving or spinning electric charges. Every magnet has it's own magnetic field which exists in the region around a magnet in which magnetic forces can act.


Electromagnetism is the interaction between electricity and magnetism. This could be explained by Hans Oersted's experiment. A coil of wire that produces a magnetic field when carrying an electric current is called a solenoid. The strength of the magnetic field of a solenoid increases as more loops per meter are used.  An electromagnet is a coil that has a soft iron core and that acts as a magnet with an electric current in the coil. The magnetic field of a an electromagnet is the field of the solenoid plus the field of the magnetized core. Thus, the magnetic field of an electromagnet may be hundreds of times stronger than the field of just the solenoid.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Electricity

         Electricity follows the law of electric charges that states: Like charges repel and opposite charges attract. The force between charged objects is an electric force.


The strength of Electric force is affected by two factors:
* The amount of charge on each object, the greater its charge, the greater the electric force is.
* The distance between the charges; the closer they are, the greater the electric force.
        
        Charged things are affected by electric force because charged things have an electric field. An electric field is the region around a charged object in which an electric force is exerted on another charged object.


Charging an object can be done through:
* Friction- when an object is "wiped" or "rubbed" from an object onto another.
* Conduction- when electrons move from one object to another by direct contact.
* Induction- when charges in uncharged metal object are rearranged without direct contact with a charged object.


      When you charge an object by any method, no charges are created nor destroyed. The number of protons and electrons stay the same. Electrons simply move from one atom to another, and it then creates difference of charge.This is then the conservation of charge.
      
 An electrical conductor is a material in which charges move easily. While an electrical insulator is a material in which charges cannot move easily. 


Static electricity is the electric charge that is stored. When charged objects find a way to release the energy, this then is called electric discharge. An example of electric discharge is lightning. 
    
  An electric current is the rate at which electricity flows at a given point to another. Two types of electric current are: alternating current (it flows in one direction then flows in the opposite direction, thus flows in two directions) and direct current (flows in on direction only). While voltage is the potential difference in electrical charge between two points in an electric field. The opposition to the flow of the current is called resistance. The relationship between voltage, current and resistance is shown by the Ohm's Law.


The formulas of Ohm's Law are:

* VOLTAGE = CURRENT x RESISTANCE
   V= I x R



*CURRENT = VOLTAGE/RESISTANCE
    I= V/R


* RESISTANCE = VOLTAGE/CURRENT
    R=V/I


Electric circuits 
   There are two types of circuits. The Parallel Circuit- the same voltage is applied to the components in a parallel circuit. The second one is Series Circuit- the current in the series passes through all the components in the circuit, therefore the components in the circuit carry the same current.
     

Friday, February 3, 2012

Radioactivity

Our topic was about Radioactivity.


 In radioactivity, obviously there is radiation; is the process of emitting energy in forms of waves or particles. Radiation is produced when particles interact or decay (emission of particles from isotopes).
Fact: A large contribution of radiation is from the sun (solar) or from radioactive isotopes of the elements (terrestrial)



  The three types of radiation are:
    
 *Alpha - is a kind of decay that gives off protons and neutrons, resulting in a different substance. Alpha particles are positively charged.
   
 * Beta- is a kind of decay that gives off positron and electrons, thus makes it negatively charged.



 *Gamma-rays- is a high energy light particle.Gamma-rays are the released energy after alpha and beta decay. It is also the deadliest ray.


Half-life is how long it takes for half of a sample of a radioactive substances to undergo radioactive decay.