Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
What areas of mathematics are required for an electronics engineer?
Good day. I want to start studying electronics from the basics to programming microcontrollers. What is the mathematical basis for this? Suggest books on this topic.
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Well, until you undertake to design modern microprocessors somewhere in Intel or program real-time hardware, no. We need only physics in the volume of the school curriculum.
Mathanalysis, theory, linear algebra and other from the program of a technical university.
I started "from the beginning" when I was not yet 7 years old. You can imagine what level of mathematics you need. Nevertheless, I was a talented child and knew what a slide rule was for (calculators were rare then).
For a start, knowledge of mathematics and physics within the secondary school is more than enough, then you will figure it out
Numeral systems
Algorithms
Datasheets for the controller
Boolean algebra, geometry for grade 8
If you get into the PID, then the analytical geometry
of the PS, by the way, everything has been done before us, there are a lot of ready-made libraries, both open and not very. Use them
It depends on what area of electronics.
If the design of semiconductor systems - then quantum mechanics. It needs: partial differential equations with complex numbers, calculus of variations, a lot of things.
If the design of analog systems - then differential equations in complex numbers.
If discrete circuits - then Boolean algebra.
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question