- Jan 7, 2012
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_computer
Most analog computing is pretty old. If you guys have any examples of modern analog computing i would love to hear about it.
You guys think analog computing will ever make a comeback? I would imagine probably integrated with digital computing.
Wikipedia has a good example:
In other words: why do difficult calculations to find answers to difficult questions when the solutions often present themselves in the natural world using natural phenomena.
You could simulate water on a computer, but the water simulation of the real world is running in real time with pretty good precision!
(using water to simulate water is probably a bad example, but hopefully it gets the idea across)
But with the speed of modern digital computers, I wonder if such circuits would even be any faster? Plus such circuits would probably be designed for very specific applications.
Still, makes me wonder:
1) Whats faster, integrating/differentiating a difficult equation using digital computers running at high frequency but requiring many clock cycles or integrating a difficult equation using an analog component using a single 'step' but at the cost of waiting for the circuit to complete.
2)Would that analog circuit be able to handle various generic problems?
Most analog computing is pretty old. If you guys have any examples of modern analog computing i would love to hear about it.
You guys think analog computing will ever make a comeback? I would imagine probably integrated with digital computing.
Wikipedia has a good example:
For example, voltage can simulate water pressure and electric current can simulate rate of flow in terms of cubic metres per second (in fact, given the proper scale factors, all that is required would be a stable resistor, in that case). Given flow rate and accumulated volume of liquid, a simple integrator provides the latter; both variables are voltages. In practice, current was rarely used in electronic analog computers, because voltage is much easier to work with.
In other words: why do difficult calculations to find answers to difficult questions when the solutions often present themselves in the natural world using natural phenomena.
You could simulate water on a computer, but the water simulation of the real world is running in real time with pretty good precision!
But with the speed of modern digital computers, I wonder if such circuits would even be any faster? Plus such circuits would probably be designed for very specific applications.
Still, makes me wonder:
1) Whats faster, integrating/differentiating a difficult equation using digital computers running at high frequency but requiring many clock cycles or integrating a difficult equation using an analog component using a single 'step' but at the cost of waiting for the circuit to complete.
2)Would that analog circuit be able to handle various generic problems?
