Here is another distinct set of 50 multiple-choice questions focusing on mathematical transformations, frequency domain impacts, sensitivity analysis, and real-world industrial troubleshooting of open-loop and closed-loop control systems.
Section 1: Frequency Domain & Sensitivity Metrics
1. How does the introduction of negative feedback alter the dominant time constant of a first-order system?
A) It keeps the time constant exactly the same.
B) It increases the time constant, making the system slower.
C) It decreases the time constant, making the system speed up its response.
D) It causes the time constant to become zero.
2. The sensitivity of a closed-loop system’s overall transfer function $T(s)$ with respect to variations in the forward path gain $G(s)$ is given by:
A) $1 + G(s)H(s)$
B) $\frac{1}{1 + G(s)H(s)}$
C) $\frac{G(s)}{1 + G(s)H(s)}$
D) $G(s)H(s)$
3. If a negative feedback system has a very high loop gain ($G(s)H(s) \gg 1$), its sensitivity to variations in the forward path gain $G(s)$ becomes:
A) Infinitely large
B) Approximately equal to unity
C) Close to zero
D) Equal to the feedback gain $H(s)$
4. What is the sensitivity of an open-loop control system to variations or drifts in its forward-path components?
A) Zero
B) Unity (1)
C) Infinite
D) Dependent on the feedback loop gain
5. When sensor noise is highly prominent in the high-frequency range, a closed-loop system can be modified to reject this noise by:
A) Pushing the loop gain to infinity at all frequencies.
B) Reducing the loop gain at those specific high frequencies.
C) Breaking the forward path entirely.
D) Switching to a positive feedback design.
6. In a closed-loop system, "Gain Margin" and "Phase Margin" are metrics used to determine:
A) The cost-effectiveness of the sensors.
B) The structural stability margins of the system before it goes unstable.
C) The power consumption efficiency of the actuators.
D) The maximum weight the plant can lift.
Section 2: Block Diagram Algebra Rules
7. When reducing a block diagram, combining two cascading blocks $G_1(s)$ and $G_2(s)$ that have a summing point between them requires:
A) Simply multiplying $G_1(s)$ and $G_2(s)$ without moving the summing point.
B) Moving the summing point either ahead or behind a block using proper algebraic shift rules.
C) Adding the two blocks together directly.
D) Eliminating the second block entirely.
8. Moving a take-off point from a position behind a block $G(s)$ (output side) to a position ahead of the block $G(s)$ (input side) requires modifying the extracted path by:
A) Multiplying the path by $G(s)$
B) Dividing the path by $G(s)$
C) Inserting a value of $1 - G(s)$
D) Keeping the path completely unaltered
9. Moving a summing point from a position behind a block $G(s)$ to a position ahead of the block $G(s)$ requires modifying the signal entering that summing point by:
A) Multiplying it by $G(s)$
B) Dividing it by $G(s)$
C) Subtracting $G(s)$ from it
D) Squaring the signal value
10. The signal that exits a summing junction in a standard negative feedback configuration is called the:
A) Actuating signal (or Error signal)
B) Plant output signal
C) Disturbance signal
D) Transduced feedback signal
11. For a system with multiple inputs (e.g., a reference input $R(s)$ and a disturbance input $D(s)$), the total output can be found by calculating the individual responses and adding them together. This principle is called:
A) Reciprocity
B) Non-linearity tuning
C) Superposition
D) Hysteresis
12. A unity feedback system has an open-loop transfer function $G(s) = \frac{K}{s(s+4)}$. The system is classified as a:
A) Type 0 system
B) Type 1 system
C) Type 2 system
D) Type 3 system
Section 3: Disturbance Rejection & System Types
13. A step disturbance acts at the input to the plant of a closed-loop system. To reduce the steady-state error caused by this disturbance, an engineer should:
A) Decrease the gain of the controller.
B) Increase the forward path gain prior to the disturbance insertion point.
C) Remove the feedback loop sensor.
D) Add an open-loop delay block.
14. Why is a feedforward control system unable to eliminate steady-state errors caused by completely unmeasured external disturbances?
A) It responds too quickly to inputs.
B) It lacks a feedback path to monitor the actual output and detect errors caused by unmeasured signals.
C) It operates purely with negative feedback dynamics.
D) It forces the characteristic equation to become zero.
15. A control loop that uses an inner feedback loop to stabilize a fast sub-process and an outer feedback loop to manage the main process variable is called:
A) Single-input single-output control
B) Cascade control
C) Open-loop sequence control
D) Positive feedback cascade
16. The dynamic behavior of a control system is entirely determined by the location of its:
A) Open-loop zeros
B) Closed-loop poles
C) Feedback path gains only
D) Input signal amplitudes
17. If the closed-loop poles of a system lie on the imaginary axis of the s-plane, the system response is:
A) Absolutely stable with exponential decay
B) Marginally stable with sustained oscillations
C) Unstable with exponential growth
D) Completely dead with zero output
18. A system is declared "BIBO Stable" if:
A) Every bounded input produces a bounded output.
B) The bandwidth is infinitely broad.
C) The internal parameter sensitivity is exactly one.
D) It operates entirely without an actuator.
Section 4: Industrial Applications & System Boundaries
19. An automated sorting arm uses an optical camera to detect the color of a box and routes it to Bin A or Bin B. This is a:
A) Continuous open-loop system
B) Closed-loop control system
C) Manual mechanism
D) Static linear resistor
20. A baseline household refrigerator without an internal digital thermometer running on a basic cycling timer is classified as:
A) An open-loop system
B) A closed-loop system
C) A servo speed regulator
D) A continuous trajectory tracking system
21. A sophisticated industrial furnace adjusts its gas valve aperture based on continuous real-time readings from a thermocouple to hold 800°C. This is a:
A) Open-loop process
B) Closed-loop process
C) Non-feedback sequence
D) Static feedforward matrix
22. A traditional mechanical wind-up music box plays music at a speed determined entirely by its spring tension, without tracking audience volume or room acoustics. It behaves as an:
A) Open-loop system
B) Closed-loop system
C) Adaptive acoustic loop
D) Servomechanism
23. The cruise control system of an electric car monitors wheel speed sensors and modulates current to the traction motor to hold 60 mph on varying slopes. This is an application of:
A) Open-loop control
B) Closed-loop control
C) Static manual override
D) Positive feedback acceleration
24. A standard automatic sprinkler system turns on water zones at 5:00 AM and shuts them down at 5:30 AM based entirely on an internal clock chip. This is an:
A) Open-loop system
B) Closed-loop system
C) Environmental adaptive loop
D) MIMO tracking system
25. An advanced agricultural irrigation system utilizes soil moisture sensors to regulate water flow rates, shutting off once soil moisture reaches a target value. This is a:
A) Open-loop system
B) Closed-loop system
C) Static feedforward loop
D) Discontinuous open process
Section 5: Control System Modeling & Equations
26. The transfer function of a system is a valid mathematical representation for which class of systems?
A) Linear Time-Variant (LTV) systems
B) Linear Time-Invariant (LTI) systems
C) Non-linear Chaotic systems
D) Discrete manual override operations
27. A system has an overall transfer function $T(s) = \frac{C(s)}{R(s)} = \frac{s+3}{s^2 + 5s + 6}$. The roots of the numerator polynomial are called the system's:
A) Poles
B) Zeros
C) Characteristic gains
D) Time constants
28. For the transfer function in Question 27, what are the poles of the system?
A) $s = -3$
B) $s = -2$ and $s = -3$
C) $s = 2$ and $s = 3$
D) $s = 0$
29. If a closed-loop system has a forward block $G(s) = \frac{4}{s}$ and a unity negative feedback path ($H(s) = 1$), what is its closed-loop characteristic equation?
A) $s = 0$
B) $s + 4 = 0$
C) $s - 4 = 0$
D) $4s = 0$
30. The open-loop transfer function of a system is given by $G(s)H(s) = \frac{K}{s(s+1)(s+2)}$. How many closed-loop poles will this system have?
A) One
B) Two
C) Three
D) Four
Section 6: Practical Engineering Diagnostics
31. During an industrial plant test, an engineer discovers that increasing the controller gain causes the output to oscillate wildly and eventually saturate. This indicates the system is approaching:
A) Absolute open-loop calibration
B) Closed-loop instability
C) Zero parameter sensitivity
D) Extremely narrow bandwidth
32. If an open-loop system's actuator encounters an internal mechanical wear offset of $+5\%$, the final system output will:
A) Self-correct back to the target setpoint.
B) Reflect an uncorrected offset error because there is no feedback loop to monitor the variation.
C) Cause the controller gain to drop automatically.
D) Shift into a state of sustained sinusoidal oscillation.
33. Which architectural attribute explains why closed-loop systems are preferred for aircraft autopilot systems?
A) They are much cheaper and simpler to build.
B) They can continuously correct the control surfaces to compensate for unpredictable wind gusts and air turbulence.
C) They are completely immune to feedback sensor failure.
D) They operate without using any software calculations.
34. In a negative feedback control loop, if the feedback path sensor gain ($H$) is inadvertently halved due to scaling errors, the final steady-state closed-loop output value for a high-gain system will approximately:
A) Decrease by half
B) Double
C) Drop to zero
D) Stay perfectly unchanged
35. A control loop where the output is a physical position or trajectory is explicitly categorized as a:
A) Current regulator
B) Servomechanism
C) Process thermal loop
D) Open-loop timer sequencer
36. The mathematical description of a system using first-order coupled differential equations in vector-matrix form is called:
A) Transfer function modeling
B) State-space representation
C) Block diagram reduction algebra
D) Frequency response modeling
37. What type of feedback is implemented inside an oscillator circuit to sustain its internal output waveform generation?
A) Negative feedback
B) Positive feedback
C) No feedback loop
D) Degenerative feedforward
38. An ideal feedback sensor should have which of the following characteristics?
A) High internal distortion, narrow range, low cost.
B) High accuracy, fast response speed, and low susceptibility to ambient noise.
C) Infinite parameter sensitivity to environmental variations.
D) A completely open-loop structural design.
39. An open-loop system is structurally incapable of handling:
A) Constant voltage inputs.
B) Internal parameter variations and unmeasured environmental disturbances.
C) Fixed time delays.
D) Laplace domain conversions.
40. In a closed-loop system, the difference between the command input and the measured feedback is processed by the:
A) Plant actuator
B) Controller
C) Output sensor
D) Disturbance block
41. The total tracking error of a system under steady-state conditions ($t \to \infty$) is known as the:
A) Transient tracking overshoot
B) Steady-state error
C) Natural resonant frequency
D) Closed-loop pole margin
42. Adding an integrator block ($\frac{1}{s}$) to the forward path of a closed-loop system generally has what effect on steady-state accuracy?
A) It increases the steady-state tracking error.
B) It reduces or eliminates steady-state tracking errors for low-frequency inputs.
C) It forces the bandwidth to zero.
D) It converts the system into a pure open-loop structure.
43. Why is calibration a vital step in configuring an open-loop control system?
A) Because calibration introduces a feedback path to the system.
B) Because the system relies entirely on accurate upfront mapping between inputs and outputs to ensure performance.
C) Because calibration makes the system immune to all component aging.
D) Because calibrated systems never require power supplies.
44. The ratio of the output response of a system to its input command in the s-domain is called the:
A) Characteristic polynomial
B) Transfer function
C) Sensitivity matrix
D) State vector
45. A closed-loop system has a forward gain $G(s)$ and negative feedback path $H(s)$. If the feedback signal is completely disconnected ($H(s) = 0$), the tracking accuracy will:
A) Stay exactly the same.
B) Degrade entirely, causing the system to behave as an uncompensated open-loop system.
C) Double its overall precision.
D) Force the error signal to settle at zero.
46. A system that has multiple distinct control loops nested inside one another is referred to as a:
A) Single-loop regulator
B) Multi-loop or Cascade control system
C) Static open-ended block
D) SISO time-invariant system
47. Which design requirement must be closely balanced when increasing the gain of a closed-loop feedback controller?
A) The physical color of the housing.
B) The trade-off between faster tracking response and the risk of system instability/oscillations.
C) The open-loop calibration frequency.
D) The length of the input signal command text.
48. The range of frequencies over which a control system can accurately follow an input command is defined as the:
A) Settling interval
B) Bandwidth
C) Peak overshoot margin
D) Attenuation block
49. What type of feedback loop can cause a control system’s output to grow exponentially until it reaches physical saturation limits?
A) Pure negative feedback
B) Positive feedback
C) Degenerative feedback
D) Symmetric zero feedback
50. An industrial automated system has a forward block $G(s) = 10$ and a negative feedback block $H(s) = 2$. What is its total closed-loop gain?
A) 20
B) $\frac{10}{21}$
C) 5
D) $\frac{1}{2}$
Answer Key
1 C | 2 B | 3 C | 4 B | 5 B
6 B | 7 B | 8 A | 9 B | 10 A
11 C | 12 B | 13 B | 14 B | 15 B
16 B | 17 B | 18 A | 19 B | 20 A
21 B | 22 A | 23 B | 24 A | 25 B
26 B | 27 B | 28 B | 29 B | 30 C
31 B | 32 B | 33 B | 34 B | 35 B
36 B | 37 B | 38 B | 39 B | 40 B
41 B | 42 B | 43 B | 44 B | 45 B
46 B | 47 B | 48 B | 49 B | 50 B
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