Wow! First time I read such a simple, clear summary. Thanks.The reason for the duality is that the base-emitter junction looks like a forward-biased diode, so you can look at the change in collector current as being proportional to the current-change through this junction, or proportional to the log of the voltage change across the junction which generates an exponential change in junction current.
Yes, to understand the current-mirror circuit you must use the voltage-to-current model of the BJT.And is this unrelated to the fact that Vbe depends exponentially, a small voltage change corresponds to a larger current change and therefore should be considered from the voltage position?
Glad it helped.Wow! First time I read such a simple, clear summary. Thanks.
That the relationship between Vbe and Ic is exponential is completely immaterial in terms of whether Vbe should be considered. The reason that it MUST be considered is because the first transistor communicates information to the second transistor by means of forcing the second transistor's Vbe to match it's own (that is imposed by the topology of the circuit). At the end of the day, the second transistor has no knowledge of what the current in the first transistor is -- in fact, it has no knowledge that it is even connected to a transistor.And is this unrelated to the fact that Vbe depends exponentially, a small voltage change corresponds to a larger current change and therefore should be considered from the voltage position?
The current through T1 generates the mirror current.Isn't it T3 that generates the output current? And then what does T3 do?
Are you referring to the external collector resistor or the collector intrinsic equivalent resistance?The resistance in the collector T3 has changed,
Changed how?Then that's it. The resistance in the collector T3 has changed, the potential of the base has changed, which changed the potential of the collector T2, which means that the potential of the base T2 has changed, which changed the potential of the base T1, as a result, the current T3 has changed, right?

The impedance has deteriorated, but the current is holding better. Does the influence of local feedback affect?In the Wilson current mirror, the impedance deteriorated slightly when resistors were added.
You're wrong. The current is holding up worse. The transmission ratio is better closer to one. And resistors improve reproducibility parameters - reduce the effect of the base-emitter voltage spread.The impedance has deteriorated, but the current is holding better. Does the influence of local feedback affect?
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