What is meant by voltage follower?
Ethan Hayes
Updated on May 29, 2026
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Considering this, what is a voltage follower used for?
The voltage follower is the safest and easiest transistor amplifier circuit to build. Its purpose is to provide approximately the same voltage to a load as what is input to the amplifier but at a much greater current. In other words, it has no voltage gain, but it does have current gain.
Subsequently, question is, what is the gain of voltage follower? A voltage follower is also known as a unity gain amplifier, a voltage buffer, or an isolation amplifier. In a voltage follower circuit, the output voltage is equal to the input voltage; thus, it has a gain of one (unity) and does not amplify the incoming signal.
Thereof, what is a voltage follower op amp?
A voltage follower (also called a unity-gain amplifier, a buffer amplifier, and an isolation amplifier) is a op-amp circuit which has a voltage gain of 1. This means that the op amp does not provide any amplification to the signal.
What is a voltage buffer?
A voltage buffer amplifier is used to transfer a voltage from a first circuit, having a high output impedance level, to a second circuit with a low input impedance level.
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