Thank you! This video finally made all the pieces of the puzzle combine together. I'm a mechanical engineer studying damped vibrations of reduced order models.
Suddenly my circuits professor dropped "complex frequency domain" when we began applying Laplace transforms and I had no idea what it meant or was. Thank you!
I've been reading Kuo's Network Analysis and Synthesis and he has practically the same graphs as you, but they didn't make any sense to me because I didn't see how to plot e^jwt. He never mentioned Euler's formula (e^jwt = cos wt + j*sin wt) , but once you did at 2:50 it started to make sense. Thanks.
Thank you! This video finally made all the pieces of the puzzle combine together. I'm a mechanical engineer studying damped vibrations of reduced order models.
dude your handwriting is beautiful
finally! the best explanation of F(s) which is the key to the Laplace Transform understanding and application.
Suddenly my circuits professor dropped "complex frequency domain" when we began applying Laplace transforms and I had no idea what it meant or was. Thank you!
That's sucks
I've been reading Kuo's Network Analysis and Synthesis and he has practically the same graphs as you, but they didn't make any sense to me because I didn't see how to plot e^jwt. He never mentioned Euler's formula (e^jwt = cos wt + j*sin wt) , but once you did at 2:50 it started to make sense. Thanks.
Well explained sir. Very much helpful for me.
Great explanation, thank you!
To plot e^(jw) we take the real part. What is the significance of complex part?
complex part tells us oscillations
great stuff plz upload more signals and system videos
Thank you for your great lessons...i have question please : why did you ignore the imaginary part of e^(jwt) in your analysis??
this video was posted 5 years ago ,unfortunately there is no content of his that is latest😞😞😞
What software was used to write and draw in the video?
Great explanation!
Such an underrated video. You need more subscribers
Really helpful
anyone explain this for me why don't we use sine wave why cosine
You should do more videos on electrical engineering
Thank you so much!
This cleared up so much for me. Why isn't this video at 1million views yet?
Your RC circuit will not behave as you described it... Otherwise it's a very good explanation!
I insist you to pls doing more of electrical engg vedios as your explanation is very good
Thank you soo much
What is the significance of using Sines? Why is that the base function and not some other arbitrary function? Just because of electricity?
Thank you man!
thanks
OMG thank you
❣❣
HEKTIK LIT ASS VID
🍾🍾