Difficulty: Easy
Correct Answer: < 1
Explanation:
Introduction / Context:First-order systems are ubiquitous (thermal lags, level dynamics, simple RC networks). In frequency response, their magnitude declines with frequency. This question checks your qualitative understanding of sinusoidal steady-state behaviour without resorting to detailed calculations.
Given Data / Assumptions:
Concept / Approach:The magnitude of a first-order transfer is |G(jω)| = K / sqrt(1 + (ωτ)^2). For unity static gain (K = 1), this is always less than or equal to 1, with equality only at ω → 0. At nonzero frequencies, the denominator exceeds 1, so the amplitude ratio is strictly less than 1. Even for K ≠ 1, the frequency-dependent factor is 1 / sqrt(1 + (ωτ)^2) < 1, so the dynamic portion reduces amplitude relative to the static gain.
Step-by-Step Solution:
Write magnitude: |G(jω)| = K / sqrt(1 + (ωτ)^2).Note that sqrt(1 + (ωτ)^2) ≥ 1, equality only when ω = 0.Therefore, for finite ω, amplitude ratio is less than K; for K = 1 it is < 1.Conclude that the ratio is less than 1 for practical sinusoidal testing.Verification / Alternative check:Bode magnitude plots for first-order lags show 0 dB at low frequency rolling off to −20 dB/decade past the corner frequency ωc = 1/τ, confirming amplitude reduction.
Why Other Options Are Wrong:
Common Pitfalls:Confusing static gain with dynamic gain; forgetting that phase lag and magnitude roll-off start as soon as ω > 0.
Final Answer:< 1
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