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We NEVER bias a transistor like that because one transistor part number has a range of current gain which is also changed when the temperature changes. You cannot buy a transistor with a certain gain. A high gain and hot transistor will be saturated and a low gain and cold transistor would be cutoff.
If you measure the current gain of a transistor and keep its temperature constant (it is difficult because the transistor will be warmed by the current in it) then you can use simple Ohm's Law with the current gain to calculate the resistor values.
apparently there was a mistake in the question.. lecturer said r1 had to be given but thanks anyways mate!
and do you know why the use of a differentria amplifier biased by a current mirror can help to reduce the lower cut off frequency?
I don't agree. if you consider a transistor to be "perfect" with an Re connected in series with the emitter. then in a differential amplifier as the two emitter currents are anti phase the voltage at the connection will be zero AC volts, which is the same as when using one transistor and decoupling the emitter. In a single ended amplifier, the input impedance is Hfe time the emitter resistor or collector impedance of the current source so the input RC time constant increases.
Frank
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