operaatoramplifikaator
Operaatoramplifikaator, often abbreviated as op-amp, is a fundamental building block in analog electronic circuits. It is a high-gain, differential voltage amplifier with a single-ended output. The name "operational amplifier" stems from its original use in analog computers to perform mathematical operations such as addition, subtraction, integration, and differentiation. An ideal op-amp has infinite open-loop gain, infinite input impedance, zero output impedance, infinite bandwidth, and zero voltage offset. Real op-amps approximate these ideal characteristics.
Op-amps are characterized by two input terminals: a non-inverting input (marked with a plus sign) and an