Hi - I understand basically how BJTs and JFETs work. But don't quite understand how you get negative voltage on the JFET gate.
For the BJT I understand it's current driven, and you are enabling carrier flow between emitter and collector when you put in a current through the base.
For the JFET, I understand it's voltage driven, and when you put in a negative voltage to the gate on an N-channel JFET, it will create more of the depletion region and constrict the carrier flow across the channel between source and drain.
HOWEVER I don't quite understand how on earth (no pun intended) you get negative voltage at the gate, if you are grounding the source, and the drain is positive.
I know you bias both the BJT and the FET to the q-point, using voltage divider resistors, but:
How does the gate get even more negative, with respect to ground (wrt to the source), in a DC circuit?
And if the signal to be amplified comes through AC (which it should), then how do you ground the source, wrt the AC signal?
I'm really stuck on this bit, any help appreciated.