Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one
below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.
Find millions of documents on Course Hero - Study Guides, Lecture Notes, Reference Materials, Practice Exams and more.
Course Hero has millions of course specific materials providing students with the best way to expand
their education.
Below is a small sample set of documents:
Kansas State - HIST - 251
Tyler Smith Professor: Louise A. Breen Hist 251- TTH 9:30 February 29, 2008 Tbsmith@k-state.edu A Soldier's View of the Revolutionary War The excerpt "A Soldier's View of the Revolutionary War" written by Joseph Plumb Martin was a primary source exam
Kansas State - SPAN - 361
Espaol 4Composicin 1Primavera 2008La primera versin de la composicin 1 se escribir en clase, el lunes 10 de marzo de 2008. No olvides traer una copia del criterio de evaluacin (no traerlo puede representar una deduccin del 50% de tu nota en la
Kansas State - SPAN - 361
Matt Vernon FSHS 350 4/23/2008 In our society we probably put the most trust in our doctors and healthcare professionals. Medical doctors and physiologists are to us now what priests were to people of medieval Europe six hundred years ago. We expect
Kansas State - SPAN - 361
Tema 2: La presencia del sexismo en la sociedad actual Es el sexismo slo ofensivo o es daino tambin? A. sexismo es mas ofensivo por mujeres El sexismo afecta la libertad individual? A. sexismo afecta la libertad individual por limitar la razones de p
RPI - PHYSICS - 1100
Physics I Exam 2 Fall 2006 Answer KeyPart A 1: 23, 2: A, 3: D, 4: A 5: A, 6: A, 7: C, 8: B, 9: C, 10: B, 11: A, 12: CB-1 20 Points The key to this problem is the elastic collision. The easiest method to solve the problem is to use equations 45a
RPI - PHYSICS - 1100
Physics I Exam 2 Spring 2006 Answer KeyPart A 1: B, 2: C, 3: A, 4: B, 5: B, 6: A, 7: A, 8: CB-1 20 Points The key to this problem is the conservation of mechanical energy and the Work Kinetic Energy Theorem. Looking For KE curve is mirror image
RPI - ECSE - 2610
ECSE-2610 Computer Components and Operations Homework # 1 Solutions Due Wednesday, Sept. 6 in studio1-8 are from the Wakerly textbook, 4th edition. 1) 2.3. (2 points each part. Solution 12 points total.)2) 2.5, parts a, b, e, f. (2 points each pa
RPI - ECSE - 2610
.i 3 .o 2 .ilb a b c .ob d s .p 7 100 01 010 01 001 01 111 01 -11 10 1-1 10 11- 10 .e
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Chapter 2: 2.1 Understand the position number systems: binary, HEX, and decimal as well as the conversion among them. See Table 2-2, for examples of conversion. 2.2 Understand how negative numbers are represented in the computer especially two's comp
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Chapter 2: 2.1 Understand the position number systems: binary, HEX, and decimal as well as the conversion among them. See Table 2-2, for examples of conversion.2.2 Understand how negative numbers are represented in the computer especially two's com
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio 4 -1) The Function first needs to be expanded into the standard form. Note that some terms do not contain all variables. The exapansion is done as follows: F = W'.1.Y'.Z' + W.X'.Y.Z' + W.1.Y.Z + W.X'.Y'.Z Since X+X' = 1; plug this
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Studio Exercise 5 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute March 1, 2005Put your name etc etc on all sheets you hand in. Since this studio is longer, it is due at the start of the next studio. The purpose of this l
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Studio Exercise 3 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Feb. 8, 2005Put your name etc etc on all sheets you hand in. Studio due at the end of this session. 1. [5 points] Assume that you have only AND gates with
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio #3 -1) Note that A*B*C*1 = A*B*C, so connect the extra input to logic 1. 2) Use 3 of the available gates. connect A,B,C,D to the inputs of one gate. Connect E,F,G,H to the second. Connect the outputs of these 2 gates to two inputs
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Studio Exercise 4 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Feb 15, 2005Put your name etc etc on all sheets you hand in. Due at the end of studio 1. For the function F = W'Y'Z' + WX'YZ' + WYZ + WX'Y'Z 1. [5 points]
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solution to HW #10 and Studio 11 The objective of this studio is to start with the design of the Vending Machine Controller. Issues like interfaces with coin recognition, vending, actual dispensing of change etc. are beyond the scope of the lab. Howe
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio #9 -While it is possible to build this circuit by cascading T Flip-Flops, this is not the solution that this studio asks for. In general it is more beneficial to go thru the design procedure outlined in this lab, to be able to bui
RPI - ECSE - 2610
NAME:_, RCS Id: _ Section:_ECSE 2610 Computer Components & Operations Studio # 10Tuesday, April 12Protoboard activity: Design a 2-bit counter, with one input M. If M=0, the counterperforms binary down counting 00-> 11->10->01->00, If M=1, the co
RPI - ECSE - 2610
NAME:_, RCS Id: _ Section:_Studio Exercise 9 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute April 5, 2005IMPORTANT: Keep the lab neat. Scraps of wire or insulation may fall on the floor. Collect them as you go and put
RPI - ECSE - 2610
part 1 -QQ* UV (note that Q* is next state and not Q' which is the complement of Q) 00 x0 01 x1 10 0x 11 1x part 2 -From the excitation table in part 1, form the Kmap (3 inputs: U,V,Q) to obtain Q* = QU + VQ' part 3 -JK excitation table: QQ* JK 00 0x
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio #10 -Write the present state/ next state table as follows (note that next state also depends on input M) Q1 Q0 M Q1* Q0* -000 11 001 01 010 00 011 11 100 01 101 00 110 10 111 10 Since the circuit is designed using D FFs, where Q*
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Studio Exercise 6 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Mar 8, 2005Put your name etc etc on all sheets you hand in. To do: Build the circuit using real hardware. Studio Equipment: Have one team member get a prot
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio #6 -The output is always 1. This actually easy to see since the output Z = Y3 + Y0 Since only one of Y3 or Y0 can be selected to be low for one input combination, one input to the OR gate must always be high. Hence Z is always hig
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio 12 -The exciation/output table can be constructed from the solutions to last week's studio, from the state/output table. Q0,Q1,Q2 => flip flop variables Q: quarter D: Dime N: Nickel C: Coin return DG: Dispense Goodies RC: Return C
RPI - ECSE - 2610
.i 3 .o 2 .ilb a b c .ob d s .p 8 000 00 001 01 010 01 011 10 100 01 101 10 110 10 111 11 .e
RPI - ECSE - 2610
NAME:_, RCS Id: _ Section:_Studio Exercise 7 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Mar 22, 2005IMPORTANT: Keep the lab neat. Scraps of wire or insulation may fall on the floor. Collect them as you go and put t
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio #7 -3 to 2 Priority Encoder -Truth table : based on the information given in the studio, A3 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 A2 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 A1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 B1 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 B0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1Construct 2 simple K-maps to obtain: B1 = A2
RPI - ECSE - 2610
NAME:_, RCS Id: _ Section:_Studio Exercise 8 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute March 29, 2005IMPORTANT: Keep the lab neat. Scraps of wire or insulation may fall on the floor. Collect them as you go and put
RPI - ECSE - 2610
COCO 2610Homework5, due date: Feb. 28 in class1) 4.19 (c), (d), and (e) 2) 4.20 for (c), (d), and (e) in 4.19 only 3) 4.69 (d) and (e) 4) Design a combinational circuit that has three inputs A, B, and C (one bit for each) and two outputs D0 and
RPI - ECSE - 2610
.Homework 10 and Studio 11All Sections - Individual workThe following is due on April 18th in class1) Use the 74x163 and any additional logic that you need to implement a modulo-11 counter that counts the sequence 5,6, ., 14, 15, 5, 6 . Note RC
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Due date Feb. 14 in class 1. Problem 4.6, 4.10 (a), (b), (e), and (f) 2. Using DeMorgan's law to find the complement of the following expressions and obtain the dual of each expression directly from its complement. a) b) c) d) F=X'Y + X'Y'Z F=(A'+B'+
RPI - ECSE - 2610
COCO 2610 1) 4.10 2) 4-13 (c)-(f) 3) 4-16 (a) and (f)Homework4 due date: Feb. 21 in class4) Design a combinational circuit that takes 2 inputs and outputs its two's complement. a) specify the input and output, how many outputs ? b) produce the
RPI - PHYSICS - 1100
Name _Exam #2 Physics I Spring 2006If you would like to get credit for having taken this exam, we need your name (printed clearly) at the top and section number below. Your name should be at the top of every page. Section # _ 1 _ 2 _ 3 _ 4 _ 5 _ 7
RPI - PHYSICS - 1100
Name: _Exam #2 Physics I Fall 2006If you would like to get credit for having taken this exam, we need your name (printed clearly) at the top and section number below. Your name should be at the top of every page. Section # _ 1 _ 2 _ 3 _ 5 _ 6 _ 7
RPI - ECSE - 2610
.Homework 11 and Studio 12All Sections - Individual work This is the continuation of the final project 1. Use D flip-flops for your finite state machine design. Build the excitation table from which the next state logic is derived (5pts). 2. Use K
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Spring 2005 COCO Project Description and Specifications1. Description of the Vending MachineThe vending machine delivers a package of goodies after it has received 25 or more in coins. The machine has a single coin slot that accepts only nickels, d
RPI - ECSE - 2610
.Studio 13 Design of a Vending Machine Controller (continuation)Now implement your design on the prototype board. This can be a team work. 1. Identify the chips and parts necessary for your implementation 2. Wire the parts on the board 3. Verify y
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Computer Components & Operations Studio Exercise 1, Jan 25, 2005 RulesWriting StandardsPlease legibly identify everything you write in some format like the following:COCO Studio 1 (studio number) Section 9 (your s
RPI - ECSE - 2610
1) a) In 6 bit 2's complement, we can represent numbers from -32 to +31 (both inclusive) hence (b), (d), (f) cannot be represented. b) 0000 0001 0010 0100 1000 1100 1110 1111 = = = = = = = = 0 1 2 4 -8 -4 -2 -1c) taking two's complement is the same
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Test #1Last name of student Student ID number SectionFirst name of studentEmail addressExam Rules:This is a 1 hour and 50 minutes exam The syllabus includes all material covered until Lecture/Activity 6 This is an Open Book and Notes Exam You
RPI - ECSE - 2610
COCOName of Student Student ID NumberExam1RCS IDSectionExam Rules:1. Open Book and Notes, 1-page 'crib' sheet is encouraged 2. Calculators are allowed, but not required 3. Laptops are permitted 4. Individual Work12345Sum20 p
RPI - ECSE - 2610
CoCO Exam 1 Answers - Spring 20001. (20 points) Number Systems, Codes, Computer ArithmeticA. (8 points) (1) Convert 101010102 to [a] its 2s-complement negative [number]. _01010110_ (1) (1) (1) (1) (1) (1) (1) Convert 101010102 to a decimal number.
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Exam #1, Spring, 2001Last name of student Student ID number SectionFirst name of studentEmail addressExam Rules:This is a 1 hour and 50 minutes exam The syllabus includes all material covered until Lecture/Activity 9 This is an Open Book and
RPI - ECSE - 2610
COCO1. A question about flip flopsc. Realize the functionality of a Toggle flip flop by designing an appropriate excitation network for a D flip flop. Fill in the next state and excitation table entries. T Q Q* D 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 tSample Exam 2d
RPI - ECSE - 2610
COCO1. A question about flip flopsa. A NAND latch is constructed as shown. Each gate has a unit delay.zAnswers to Sample Exam 2b. Given input waveforms m and n, determine the waveforms for y and z.m0y1m nn0 y0 z1 1 01Suppose m = n =
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Solutions to Studio #5 -the studio consists broadly of 3 parts, in each part we have to analyse a truth table for a circuit using K-maps.part 1 -Here the truth table is given to us. We can directly write D = sum(3,5,6,7) => D = A'BC + AB'C + ABC' +
RPI - ECSE - 2610
Studio Exercise 2 ECSE-2610 Computer Components & Operations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Feb. 1 , 2005Put your name etc etc on all sheets you hand in. (It's not necessary to list your blood type :-) This studio is due at the start of next week'
Dickinson - BIO - 334
ColonHepat structureKupffer cellsb. can Bilary transportPancreas
Dickinson - PSYC - 101
Psych of Food Test 2 Chapter 5: The meaning of body size Media Representation - Comic strips: o Men appear more frequently than women o Men have more central role o Women are usually minor characters o Men appeared with a wide range of occupations o
Dickinson - PSYC - 101
Psych of Food Test 3 Chapter 8: Obesity Defining obesity 1- population means a. exploring mean weights within a specific population and deciding whether someone is below average weight, average, or above average weight in terms of percentage over wei
Dickinson - WOST - 101
The FoundersLucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton - traveled to London in 1840 for a World Anti-Slavery Convention - Seneca Falls Convention of 1848: group of American women and men met to discuss the legal limitations imposed on women during thi
Dickinson - PSYC - 101
Caitlin Macaluso Media Representation of body shape and size In general, women are more of an object in magazine ads, newspapers and comic strips where as men are more central and portrayed as more important. The majority of the magazine ads I found
Dickinson - BIO - 334
Microanatomy Test 2CartilageCell types - Proteoglycans= class of glycoproteins found in the ground substance of cartilage in the extracellular matrix- filler substance - Chondroblasts= rounded cartilage precursor cells that form from the different
UCSD - HUM - 1
Humanities Lecture: 1/25 The Nations How do the Israelites think about themselves in relation to other nations? The Israelites think that the reign of David was the best. Introduction Geography and Ethnicity A. How ethnic groups coalesce is through w
UCSD - HUM - 1
Quote 1: "'My word, how mortals take the gods to task! All their afflictions come from us, we hear. And what of their own failings? Greed and folly double the suffering in the lot of man. See how Aigisthos, for his double portion, stole Agamemnon's w
UCSD - BILD - 10
Jill's BILD10 Study Guide/List (just a suggestion for studying. the exam could cover stuff not on here, this is just a list of important concepts) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Know the structure of a T-phage (2 subunits) and what their func
UCSD - BILD - 10
Jill's BILD10 Study Guide/List (just a suggestion for studying. the exam could cover stuff not on here, this is just a list of important concepts) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Know the structure of a T-phage (2 subunits) and what their func
UCSD - HUM - 1
Humanities Lecture: 1/23 Rape and the Bible How does the bible conceptualize rape? What do the laws governing rape say about women at that time? From a legal perspective, rape is not a crime against the woman, but against her father or brother. It is
UCSD - CHEM - 13
I.II.III.IV. V.Hormones and Neurotransmitters A. Hormones 1. Hormones arrive via the bloodstream 2. A chemical messenger secreated by cells of the endocrine system and transported through the bloodstream to target cells with appropriate recep
UCSD - COGS - 1
Cognitive Science Lecture: 4.14 Language Grammar A. "The relationship between form and meaning" B. Example 1: Verbal Morphology 1. 1st: Singular Amo ; Plural = Amamus C. Example 2: Embedded Clauses 1. A rat was chased by a snake sang 2. A rat chased
UCSD - COGS - 1
Cognitive Science 1: 4.10 A lot of the brain consists of receptor surfaces o There are more receptors in the ganglion cells o They are most dense in the retina The Brain o It is made of neurons o Long ago, people didn't know its function o About 150