Consider an inverting amplifier with a nominal gain of 1000 constructed from an op amp with an input offset voltage of 3 mV and with output saturation levels of ±10 V. If the effect of VOs(input offset voltage) is nulled at room temperature (250C), how large an input can one now apply if the circuit is to operate at a constant temperature?

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Operational Amplifiers topics include: Ideal operational amplifiers, inverting and non-inverting configuration, differentiators and differential amplifiers, operational amplifiers, finite open loop gain effect, circuit performance bandwidth and large signal operations. An operational amplifier (op-amp) is a high-gain electronic voltage amplifier that has a differential input and a single-ended output. It produces an output voltage by applying an open-loop gain to the difference between the voltage at the noninverting input terminal and the voltage at the inverting input terminal.  Op-amps... Show more

Consider an inverting amplifier with a nominal gain of 1000 constructed from an op amp with an input offset voltage of 3 mV and with output saturation levels of ±10 V. If the effect of V<sub>Os</sub>(input offset voltage) is nulled at room temperature (25<sub>0</sub>C), how large an input can one now apply if the circuit is to operate at a constant temperature?