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Integrator and Differentiator Circuits — MCQs – EE

1. An Op-Amp integrator produces an output that is proportional to the:

(A) Input voltage


(B) Derivative of the input


(C) Integral of the input


(D) Square of the input



2. An Op-Amp differentiator produces an output that is proportional to the:

(A) Input voltage


(B) Derivative of the input


(C) Integral of the input


(D) Constant value



3. In an ideal integrator circuit, the feedback element is a:

(A) Resistor


(B) Capacitor


(C) Inductor


(D) Diode



4. In an ideal differentiator circuit, the input element is a:

(A) Resistor


(B) Capacitor


(C) Inductor


(D) Transformer



5. The output of an ideal integrator for a constant DC input is:

(A) A DC level


(B) A linear ramp


(C) A sine wave


(D) A square wave



6. The output of an ideal differentiator for a constant DC input is:

(A) Constant DC


(B) Zero


(C) Increasing ramp


(D) Decreasing ramp



7. In a practical integrator, a resistor is connected in parallel with the feedback capacitor to:

(A) Increase gain


(B) Limit DC drift


(C) Reduce noise


(D) Improve phase shift



8. In a practical differentiator, a resistor is connected in series with the input capacitor to:

(A) Prevent high-frequency noise


(B) Increase bandwidth


(C) Increase output voltage


(D) Decrease input impedance



9. An ideal Op-Amp integrator has a phase shift of:

(A) 0°


(B) 45°


(C) 90°


(D) 180°



10. A differentiator circuit has a phase shift of:

(A) 0°


(B) 90°


(C) 180°


(D) 270°



11. The output waveform of an integrator for a square wave input is:

(A) Square wave


(B) Triangular wave


(C) Sine wave


(D) DC



12. The output waveform of a differentiator for a triangular input is:

(A) Triangular


(B) Square


(C) Sine


(D) Constant



13. The input impedance of an ideal integrator at low frequency is:

(A) Low


(B) High


(C) Zero


(D) Constant



14. The input impedance of a differentiator at high frequency is:

(A) High


(B) Low


(C) Zero


(D) Infinite



15. The practical integrator behaves as an inverting amplifier at:

(A) High frequency


(B) Low frequency


(C) DC


(D) Both (B) and (C)



16. A differentiator can act as a:

(A) High-pass filter


(B) Low-pass filter


(C) Band-stop filter


(D) Band-pass filter



17. An integrator can act as a:

(A) High-pass filter


(B) Low-pass filter


(C) Band-pass filter


(D) All-pass filter



18. The gain of an ideal integrator decreases with:

(A) Frequency


(B) Input voltage


(C) Feedback resistance


(D) Temperature



19. The gain of an ideal differentiator increases with:

(A) Frequency


(B) Input voltage


(C) Output current


(D) Temperature



20. An ideal differentiator circuit amplifies:

(A) Low-frequency signals


(B) High-frequency signals


(C) Only DC


(D) Noise signals



21. The main limitation of a practical differentiator is:

(A) High-frequency noise amplification


(B) Low gain


(C) High output impedance


(D) Narrow bandwidth



22. The capacitor in an integrator is responsible for:

(A) Differentiation


(B) Summation


(C) Accumulation of charge


(D) Limiting current



23. The capacitor in a differentiator is responsible for:

(A) Storing energy


(B) Producing current proportional to rate of voltage change


(C) Maintaining constant voltage


(D) Integrating the signal



24. An Op-Amp integrator circuit is commonly used in:

(A) Filters


(B) Analog computers


(C) Signal generators


(D) All of the above



25. An Op-Amp differentiator circuit is commonly used in:

(A) Edge detection and wave shaping


(B) DC amplification


(C) Voltage regulation


(D) Audio amplification



26. The feedback path of an integrator contains:

(A) Resistor only


(B) Capacitor only


(C) Both resistor and capacitor


(D) Inductor



27. The feedback path of a differentiator contains:

(A) Resistor only


(B) Capacitor only


(C) Inductor only


(D) Diode



28. The output voltage of an inverting integrator is:

(A) In phase with input


(B) 180° out of phase with input


(C) 90° out of phase


(D) Constant



29. The output voltage of an inverting differentiator is:

(A) In phase with input


(B) 180° out of phase with input


(C) 90° out of phase


(D) Random phase



30. A practical Op-Amp differentiator circuit is designed to:

(A) Limit high-frequency gain and noise


(B) Increase gain at high frequencies


(C) Amplify all signals equally


(D) Work as a voltage follower



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