Latelly I have found this:
"The primary use of a gyrator is to simulate an inductive element in a small
electronic circuit or integrated circuit. Before the invention of the
transistor, coils of wire with large inductance might be used in electronic
filters. A real inductor can be replaced by a much smaller assembly
containing a capacitor, operational amplifiers or transistors, and
resistors. This is especially useful in integrated circuit technology."
From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyrator
When the Gas Analogy substitute the Hydraulic Analogy (EM)?
S*
Right. Andro, now THERE is a reliable source of information! I saw on
PBS that they found a fossil of one of Andro's ancestors.
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Misc/1stPolitico.jpg
L is the spring! You can tell because the symbol for and inductor
LOOKS like a spring! :-)
Truth is that L can be EITHER the mass or the spring depending upon
the given analogy you coose to use. Andro is clueless.
> Latelly I have found this:
>
> "The primary use of a gyrator is to simulate an inductive element in a small
> electronic circuit or integrated circuit. Before the invention of the
> transistor, coils of wire with large inductance might be used in electronic
> filters. A real inductor can be replaced by a much smaller assembly
> containing a capacitor, operational amplifiers or transistors, and
> resistors. This is especially useful in integrated circuit technology."
> From:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyrator
And your idea is that capacitors are inductors? You sound like Andro.
Next you'll be trying to tell us you found out about capacitive
transformers.
> When the Gas Analogy substitute the Hydraulic Analogy (EM)?
Maybe when someone shows that the Gas analogy better fits reality.
Marx did it in 1924. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marx_generator
In the electronic devices are only such transformers.
<> When the Gas Analogy substitute the Hydraulic Analogy (EM)?
>Maybe when someone shows that the Gas analogy better fits reality.
See the new topic: "Are antennas simmilar to the Kundt's tube?"
S*