I need some help with this problem. Can you explain why is there no thevenin equivalent circuit for this circuit?
The only explanation I get from the book is that the load resistor is in series with the current source. I still cannot get my head around that explanation. I would appreciate it if someone can give me a more detailed explanation for this one. THANK YOU!
I need some help with this problem. Can you explain why is there no thevenin equivalent circuit for this circuit?
The only explanation I get from the book is that the load resistor is in series with the current source. I still cannot get my head around that explanation. I would appreciate it if someone can give me a more detailed explanation for this one. THANK YOU!
The Thevenin resistance of that circuit is infinity looking in from the load resistor. No matter what the load resistor value, the current through the resistor will be the same. No matter what external voltage is applied to the load terminals, the current source value will remain the same. That is the definition of a current source. Its current value is the same no matter what any external sources are present, and it has an infinite impedance. You can model the circuit from the load resistor side as a single current source.
I need some help with this problem. Can you explain why is there no thevenin equivalent circuit for this circuit?
The only explanation I get from the book is that the load resistor is in series with the current source. I still cannot get my head around that explanation. I would appreciate it if someone can give me a more detailed explanation for this one. THANK YOU!
Even if we try to calculate Rthevenin, we cannot do that because then we have to open circuit the current source which ultimately make Rthevenin = infinity.
Anyway we generally use thevenin theorem mainly to calculate the current across the load resistor and in the circuit you have shared, current in the load resistor will always be equal to bib.