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== Overview ==
Among his several important contributions to [[Network analysis (electrical circuits)|circuit theory]] and [[control theory]], engineer [[Hendrik Wade Bode]], while working at [[Bell Labs]] in the 1930s, devised a simple but accurate method for graphing [[Gain (electronics)|gain]] and phase-shift plots. These bear his name, ''Bode gain plot'' and ''Bode phase plot''. "Bode" is often pronounced {{IPAc-en|ˈ|b|oʊ|d|i}} {{respell|BOH|dee}}, although the Dutch pronunciation is {{IPA
Bode was faced with the problem of designing stable [[amplifier]]s with [[feedback]] for use in telephone networks. He developed the graphical design technique of the Bode plots to show the [[gain margin]] and [[phase margin]] required to maintain stability under variations in circuit characteristics caused during manufacture or during operation.<ref>David A. Mindell ''Between Human and Machine: Feedback, Control, and Computing Before Cybernetics'' JHU Press, 2004, {{ISBN|0801880572}}, pp. 127–131.</ref> The principles developed were applied to design problems of [[servomechanism]]s and other feedback control systems. The Bode plot is an example of analysis in the [[frequency ___domain]].
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