Abstract
A vacuum tube or a transistor, operating linearly under small-signal conditions, may be represented as a resistive (i.e., nonreactive) 3-terminal network element. Such an element may be considered as composed of a triangle of resistors and a 3-terminal gyrator. If the element is active, at least one resistor is negative. The activity or passivity of the element is shown to be dependent on the three resistors, while the reciprocity relation is obeyed or violated according to whether the gyrator is absent or present respectively. It is also shown that an active 3-terminal element cannot obey reciprocity and remain stable, so that the gyrator has a stabilizing effect. Some general relations are derived concerning 3-terminal active elements. These relations apply to any active element that is described by a 3-terminal resistive network, without regard to the physical principles underlying its operation.

This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit: