Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Alan Horowitz" wrote in message om... when a current just starts flowing into a RL or RC circuit, how does the voltage "know" that it should be increasing exactly 63% during each time-constant period? And whence the number 63%? The voltage knows nothing about how it's "supposed" to behave. It just does its thing without a care in the world. The thing it does though, will always result in exactly the same voltage shape, because with a fixed R and C and supply voltage it can do no other. As the C voltage grows, the voltage across the R must drop. If the R voltage drops then the charging current must drop. If the charging current drops, then the C voltage must rise at a slower rate, ... and so on and so on ... Everything slows down more and more as time goes on. A bit of thought and you'll notice that the C can never actually charge exactly to the supply voltage. As this RL RC (dis)charging process must always result in this particular shape or curve and this quite 'natural' curve turns up across all branches of science, engineering and finance, it wasn't long before the mathematicians found they could usefully model, or describe the curve accurately, using an equation based on the 2.718 "e" value used for working out 'natural' logarithms. Hence the maths numbers and formulae that are taught are a good descriptive model or analogue of what's happening in the circuit but have nothing to do with the actual circuit workings. Be wary when relying purely on maths models. They confer 'expertise' into how something works, without offering 'understanding' of how something works. The difference can be crucial. regards john |