Hello,
[see corrections later in this thread]
Im not sure how much progress you have made so far, but just to try to help a little more here...
You can reduce the circuit to a source and impedance. This might make it easier for you to understand.
If you redraw the circuit to position the current source where the capacitor is now and the capacitor where the current source is now you'll see you just have an impedance being driven by a current source. You can reduce the three elements L,C, and R, down to one impedance. The output across the resistor is then the current times this impedance.
To combine into one impedance you can add the impedance of the cap to the inductors, then put that in parallel with the resistor. The output is then Vout=I*Z where Vout is the voltage across the resistor.
In many circuits that have both an L and a C the response could be a second order damped sinusoidal response. Double check for this using a circuit simulator, and i think you will find there should be a sinusoidal term in the solution as well as an exponential. So something like A+B*e^(-at)*sin(wt) (where B could be equal to A) might be expected.
[see corrections later in this thread]
Im not sure how much progress you have made so far, but just to try to help a little more here...
You can reduce the circuit to a source and impedance. This might make it easier for you to understand.
If you redraw the circuit to position the current source where the capacitor is now and the capacitor where the current source is now you'll see you just have an impedance being driven by a current source. You can reduce the three elements L,C, and R, down to one impedance. The output across the resistor is then the current times this impedance.
To combine into one impedance you can add the impedance of the cap to the inductors, then put that in parallel with the resistor. The output is then Vout=I*Z where Vout is the voltage across the resistor.
In many circuits that have both an L and a C the response could be a second order damped sinusoidal response. Double check for this using a circuit simulator, and i think you will find there should be a sinusoidal term in the solution as well as an exponential. So something like A+B*e^(-at)*sin(wt) (where B could be equal to A) might be expected.
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