And the voltage at point B will be the same as the voltage at point A, 0V, as seen in a closed-loop structure, which indicates that current I1 and I2 will be passing into resistor Rf (higher potential) rather than into the inverting terminal (lower potential) of the Op-amp. The Inverting Adder Circuit can be seen here with two inputs on the inverting input. ![]() ![]() Inverting adder is similar to the above amplifier, where any input voltages of the inverting terminal are supported but where the non-inverting terminal is focused, but there are several inputs on their inverting terminal that differ from that of the Inverting Adder circuit.
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