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jason9
modified 7 years ago

Insane Voltage

2
15
291
02:21:07
At 94ZV/s, or 94000000000GV/s, this produces some crazy voltage. Unfortunately, the program cannot find a solution after 1/20th of a second, or if your lucky, it’ll last 1/10th of a second.
published 7 years ago
Issacsutt
7 years ago
Impossible though. Especially because your using a current source, which is really drawing power from a high voltage power source (not generating it on its own) which gets manipulated to control the degree of voltage forced through the capacitors. You could do it with a resistor too, but unlike a capacitor, its impedance is fixed so it will not produce an indefinitely rising voltage... with a really high value resistor, it takes a lot of voltage to push even a small current through it, and even higher if your trying to use a current source attempting to maintain a current as high as 1MA (or even reach, because this is practically impossible in the real world at a magnitude so high). Could you make such a current source? I highly doubt it. You'd need an evil genius and his laboratory for sure!
jason9
7 years ago
This isn’t even meant to be real. I thought that was rather obvious.
lenzrulz
7 years ago
What’s becoming blatantly obvious is that you’re not 13...just saying!
Issacsutt
7 years ago
Mmm ok, wasn't sure why you posted it
Issacsutt
7 years ago
Jason9, if you don't mind me asking, what country are you from?
jason9
7 years ago
USA, California.
jason9
7 years ago
@lenzrulz, what makes you say that? Is it because I’m saying stuff that makes it look like I went to advanced schools? Well, you may be right about the school part, if you consider wikipedia an advanced school. It really has a bunch of good stuff on it. I’ve read about chemistry, physics, some quantum physics even, biochemistry, semiconductors, electromagnetic radiation, superconductors, and much more. The only thing I have much knowledge about that I’m not learning from wikipedia is electronics, and that’s entirely with the help of Every Circuit and you guys.
sparky2010mp
7 years ago
It doesn't find a solution because this circuit doesn't work.
Issacsutt
7 years ago
Awesome man! I wish I had as many good waves as you, down here in North Carolina. Being you live there, that would be an awesome opportunity to learn how to surf! It just might be a little colder where your at though, so you may need a wetsuit
Issacsutt
7 years ago
Make a career out of it one day Jason!
Issacsutt
7 years ago
(I'm talking about electronics, but if you wanna become a pro surfer, that's cool too)
jason9
7 years ago
I very much like studying things like math and physics and stuff. Not so much philosophy or english or those kinds of things. I even know how nuclear reactors work, and could even design one (sorta) and hope it sorta works. It might explode though.
Robert_Kidd
7 years ago
Hmm. Please don’t go nuclear 🤪. Stay with electronics.
jason9
7 years ago
Electronics and math are my two main string points. Especially electronics. Chemistry is probably my next best strong point. After that, it’s physics, especially microscopic physics like atoms, molecules, quantum physics, nuclear physics, electromagnetic physics, semiconductor physics, and also astronomy physics (like how stars work and types of stars like neutron stars or even black holes).
LJ1234
6 years ago
I did the exact same thing for my first circuit.

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