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I need help with an Electrical Engineering problem for a circuit design controlling a

car's sequential taillight (1957 Ford Thunderbird).

Equipment:
-One C.A.D.E.T. Trainer
-One Wire Kit
-74LS74 Dual D-type Positive-Edge-Triggered Flip-flops
-Various 74LS00-series Integrated Circuits
Design a clocked sequential circuit that might be used to control the taillights of a car. This
particular model, the 1957 Fod Thunderbird has six taillights that behaved as follows (White
Circle = ON and Black Circle = OFF)

As you can see, a turn signal is indicated by a sequence of four states that turn on one, two, three,
and zero lights in the direction of the turn. This sequence should not be interrupted by the brake
signal, which should cause all of the taillights not involved in the turn signal to turn ON
asynchronously. On the other hand, a turn signal sequence should be suspended immediately if
both turn signals are switched off.
In designing your circuit, you may assume that the LEFT and RIGHT turn signals will never be
asserted simultaneously. In addition, your circuit need not restart the taillight sequence if a left
turn signal is immediately followed by a right turn signal, or vice versa.
Use the function generator provided by the C.A.D.E.T. Trainer to create a 1-Hz. square wave
signal suitable for clocking your circuit. Use the Trainers logic switches to provide the brake,
left turn signal, and right turn signal inputs to your circuit, and use LEDs from the Logic Monitor
to display the six taillight outputs. (It may be helpful to display the current state using the
remaining LEDs.) Carefully note the sequential behavior of your circuit for each valid
combination of input and present state.

Show that in vacuum the pressure tensor of a (complex) plane electromagnetic


wave only has a contribution when both directions in this bi-vector are along the
direction of motion, and that contribution is equal in magnitude to the energy

density. HINT: Choose 3 orthogonal axes along the direction of motion, the electric
vector, and the magnetic vector.

Modify the register of Figure 6-11 so that it will operate according to the following function
table, using mode selection inputs S1 and S0:
(Chegg has the textbook solution but I do not understand it)

A student measures his own ECG on an oscillloscope having a


differential input. For figure 6.11, Zin= 1 Mohm, Z1=20 kohm, Z2= 10
kohm, Zg=30 kohm, and idb= 0.5 uA. Calculate the powerline
interference the student observes. Calculate the common mode and
differential mode interferences applied to the input pins of A and B from
the power-line.

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