long-tailed pair
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long-tailed pair
Summary
long-tailed pair ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (11 views/month).[1]
Key Facts
- long-tailed pair is credited with the discovery of Bryan Harold Cabot Matthews[2].
- long-tailed pair is credited with the discovery of Alan Blumlein[3].
- long-tailed pair is credited with the discovery of Otto Schmitt[4].
- long-tailed pair is credited with the discovery of Jan Friedrich Tönnies[5].
- long-tailed pair's image is recorded as Differential amplifier long-tailed pair.svg[6].
- long-tailed pair's subclass of is recorded as amplifier stage[7].
- long-tailed pair's subclass of is recorded as differential amplifier[8].
- long-tailed pair's subclass of is recorded as error amplifier[9].
- long-tailed pair's Commons category is recorded as Long-tailed pair[10].
- long-tailed pair's has part is recorded as active electronic component[11].
- long-tailed pair's has part is recorded as current source[12].
- long-tailed pair's has part is recorded as electrical load[13].
- long-tailed pair's Google Knowledge Graph ID is recorded as /g/1234t7w0[14].
Body
Works and Contributions
Credited discoveries include Bryan Harold Cabot Matthews[2], a scientist[15], 1906–1986[16], awarded the Fellow of the Royal Society[17]; Alan Blumlein[3], an inventor[18], 1903–1942[19], of United Kingdom[20], specialised in telephony[21]; Otto Schmitt[4], a biologist[22], 1913–1998[23], of United States[24], awarded the John Price Wetherill Medal[25], specialised in biophysics[26]; and Jan Friedrich Tönnies[5], a physicist[27], 1902–1970[28], of Germany[29].
Why It Matters
long-tailed pair ranks in the top 2% of general entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (11 views/month).[1]