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Alan Horowitz wrote:
"---how does the voltage "know" that it should be increasing exactly 63% during each time-constant period?" The rate of growth or decline is natural as the circuit response is non-variable and operates on the energy flow in the circuit at the instant. This rate depends on the state of charge in the capacitor while the capacitor is charging. Rate of capacitor discharge depends on the charge remaining in the capacitor. It is steadily (exponentially) declining during discharge. The time required to charge a capacitor to 63% (actually 63.2%) of full charge, or to discharge it to 37% (actually 36.8%) of its initial charge or voltage is defined as the "time constant" of the circuit. A search on "time constant" will produce many colorful illustrations. Time constant is the time in seconds for a capacitor to charge up to 63% of the applied voltage, or the time it takes a fully charged capacitor to discharge from 100% down to 37% of full charge. Time constant is the product of R (in ohms) times C (in farads) in an RC circuit. Time constant is the quotient of L/R with L in henries and R in ohms in an RL circuit. Epsilon is a number approximately 2.71828 which is the base of the natural, Naperian, or hyperbolic logarithms. There is a natural rate of growth or decline caused by growth or decline as a constant percentage of size at the moment. It is epsilon. As an example of natural decline, the quantity of charge (q) remaining in a capacitor after current has been flowing out for (t) seconds is: Qo times epsilon raised to the minus t/CR power. Where Qo is the initial value of q. Voltage is proportional to charge, so V at any time can be found by substituting Vo for Qo in the formula for q. Best regards, Richard Harrison, KB5WZI |