Block Diagram

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BLOCK DIAGRAM

BLOCK DIAGRAM DEFINITION:

block diagrams can also be useful when demonstrating an idea, but concealing the inner workings of
potentially secret intellectual property (IP). Top-down design in electrical engineering often progresses through
increasingly detailed block diagrams. After enough detail is added through iterations, the block diagram
becomes a schematic. Block diagrams in process control show the functions of operations but not the
components that perform them. The functions of block diagrams may then be implemented with programmable
logic controllers (PLC).

SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM

SCHEMATIC DIAGRAM DEFINITION: A schematic is defined as a picture that shows something in a simple way,
using symbols. A schematic diagram is a picture that represents the components of a process, device, or
other object using abstract, often standardized symbols and lines. Schematic diagrams only depict the
significant components of a system, though some details in the diagram may also be exaggerated or introduced
to facilitate the understanding of the system.
PICTORIAL DIAGRAM

PICTORIAL DIAGRAM DEFINITION: The simplest of all diagrams is the pictorial diagram. It shows a picture or
sketch of the variouscomponents of a specific system and the wiring between these components. This
simplified diagramprovides the means to readily identify the components of a system, even if you are not
familiar with theirphysical appearance. This type of diagram shows the various components without regard to
their physicallocation, how the wiring is marked, or how the wiring is routed. It does, however, show you the
sequencein which the components are connected

https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1748006X231183196
AGC is a system that controls the increase in the amplitude of an electrical signal from the original input to the
amplified output, automatically. AGC is used in data processing to improve the visibility of seismic data in which
attenuation or spherical divergence has caused amplitude decay (Figure 5.3)

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