UMBC CSEE Undergraduate Studies

1998 Electrical Engineering Course Descriptions


These course descriptions are obsolete.

These are the course descriptions as they appear in the 1998-2000 UMBC Undergraduate Catalog. The current course descriptions are availabel here.

Last updated: 3/30/2000.


ENEE 204 Basic Circuit Theory. [3]

Required of sophomores in electrical engineering and computer engineering. Kirchhoff's laws, linear, nonlinear and time-varying elements of systems and circuits. Solution of circuit differential equations, natural and complete responses. Coupled elements, ideal transformers, controlled sources. Node and mesh analysis in the time domain and frequency domain. Prerequisite: PHYS 122; Corequisite: MATH 225

ENEE 244 Digital Logic Design. [3]

Topics include gates, flip-flops, registers and counters. Karnaugh map simplification of gate networks. switching algebra, synchronous sequential systems, PLAS, and elements of binary arithmetic units. Prerequisite: ENES 240.

ENEE 300 Principles of Electrical Engineering. [3]

Not applicable in the electrical engineering and computer engineering programs. Acceptable as prerequisite for some advanced ENEE courses. Analysis of linear systems, introduction to Laplace transforms, transient and steady-state responses, introduction to the concepts of electromagnetic fields and electric machines, principles and circuit applications of semiconductors, electron tubes and integrated circuits. Prerequisites: PHYS 122, MATH 225.

ENEE 301L Electrical Engineering Laboratory. [1]

Experiments on the transient and steady-state response of linear circuits, electric machines, electron tubes and semi-conductor devices. Not applicable to EE major program. Two hours of laboratory per week. Prerequisite: ENEE 300. [an error occurred while processing this directive]