negative-R -- still confused...
@Allcanadian
Thanks for the explanation ... but I'm still a bit confused by
this phenomenon... You seem to just accept it as if its no big deal.
My understanding is that negative resistance is suppose to be impossible.
It was a highly debated topic among physicists ... or so I understood.
Perhaps it is just a debate about semantics.
HP has announced a break through with memristors --
claiming they will be able to make very small memories now -- or
so they hope.
This seemed like a huge deal ... and yet I find that
NEON ... and other gases have had this property all along ..
and it has been known about for more than 100 years.
So yes its seems that OHMS should be a measurement that
is ONLY positive ... so that we can keep our sanity.
If you measure a circuit ... and end up with a calculation producing
negative resistance ... there is some unaccounted for effect.
Take Mutual Induction & Non-Conservative fields.
If you were unaware that mutual inductive fields were affecting
your circuit in some way, when you measured things ...
and calculated the value of some resistance, you might find
it is negative ... not because you did your math wrong ... but
rather because you failed to account for the energy entering
your system from the outside due to mutual induction.
So lets take a close look at NEON here. It is established
that the curve is non-linear ... and there are parts of that
curve that exhibit a negative resistance like behavior.
But WHY? Is energy entering from the outside when ionization
occurs? Yes we know this occurs due to ionization ... but
do we know WHAT occurs?
That is my question.
Originally posted by Allcanadian
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Thanks for the explanation ... but I'm still a bit confused by
this phenomenon... You seem to just accept it as if its no big deal.
My understanding is that negative resistance is suppose to be impossible.
It was a highly debated topic among physicists ... or so I understood.
Perhaps it is just a debate about semantics.
HP has announced a break through with memristors --
claiming they will be able to make very small memories now -- or
so they hope.
This seemed like a huge deal ... and yet I find that
NEON ... and other gases have had this property all along ..
and it has been known about for more than 100 years.
So yes its seems that OHMS should be a measurement that
is ONLY positive ... so that we can keep our sanity.
If you measure a circuit ... and end up with a calculation producing
negative resistance ... there is some unaccounted for effect.
Take Mutual Induction & Non-Conservative fields.
If you were unaware that mutual inductive fields were affecting
your circuit in some way, when you measured things ...
and calculated the value of some resistance, you might find
it is negative ... not because you did your math wrong ... but
rather because you failed to account for the energy entering
your system from the outside due to mutual induction.
So lets take a close look at NEON here. It is established
that the curve is non-linear ... and there are parts of that
curve that exhibit a negative resistance like behavior.
But WHY? Is energy entering from the outside when ionization
occurs? Yes we know this occurs due to ionization ... but
do we know WHAT occurs?
That is my question.
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