crossman
Senior Member
- Location
- Southeast Texas
RE: I would expect the 4th circuit element to have more peculiar characteristics than just a variable resistance.
A potentiometer has memory. A capacitor has memory. An SCR has memory. Heck, a three-wire control circuit has memory. Nothing new and fundamental there.
More food for thought:
1. A miniaturized diode in an IC chip is very very tiny, just a pinpoint of atoms, and behaves differently than a normal resistor, but no one says it is a fourth element.
2. Concerning fundamental circuit elements, could we build a capacitor out of resistors and inductors? Could we build an inductor out of capacitors and resistors? Could we build a resistor out of capacitors and inductors?
Using only two of the original three circuit elements, in any amount and any configuration, is it possible to mimick the third component in a black box, with just two leads coming out of it? And no manner of testing could discern the difference between the real device and the mimicked device?
Good question. I would be willing to bet that these three circuit elements prove fundamental. Now, if we can take a "fourth element" and mimick it with the other three elements, then the "fourth element" really isn't fundamental.
I'm still just winging it here.
Mivey, thanks for the reply.
mivey said:It does. It has memory
A potentiometer has memory. A capacitor has memory. An SCR has memory. Heck, a three-wire control circuit has memory. Nothing new and fundamental there.
More food for thought:
1. A miniaturized diode in an IC chip is very very tiny, just a pinpoint of atoms, and behaves differently than a normal resistor, but no one says it is a fourth element.
2. Concerning fundamental circuit elements, could we build a capacitor out of resistors and inductors? Could we build an inductor out of capacitors and resistors? Could we build a resistor out of capacitors and inductors?
Using only two of the original three circuit elements, in any amount and any configuration, is it possible to mimick the third component in a black box, with just two leads coming out of it? And no manner of testing could discern the difference between the real device and the mimicked device?
Good question. I would be willing to bet that these three circuit elements prove fundamental. Now, if we can take a "fourth element" and mimick it with the other three elements, then the "fourth element" really isn't fundamental.
I'm still just winging it here.
Mivey, thanks for the reply.