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What is this setup?

Back in the early 60s I knew a man with a keen interest in science.  He   explained to me how he had developed an analogue memory which consisted of a shallow rectangular non-conducting dish filled with a super saturated solution of ? and with 2 rows of electrical contacts down opposite sides so that when an ac current of a particular frequency and waveform was made to pass from a contact on one side to a contact on the other side it set up a crystalised path with the waveform of the current. Many such waves could be set up in the same dish, even crossing each other which could then be used as wave "gates" for that particular frequency and waveform. I do not know what the solution was and I would guess that it would be rather sensitive to knocks and movement.


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  • Answered by JAS
  • on 2010-04-15 13:47:48

sssss
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Jon,  Thanks for your explanation.  This chap was also most interested in early computers and electronics.  Obviously no H&S restrictions back in those days.

Just before WW2 he worked in the labs of The Russian Oil and Petroleum Co. in East London, where they were asked to make a strawberry flavoured oil for use in strawberry jam processing machinery, so that any leaks would not be detected!

 

Best wishes,

 

John

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  • Asked by JAS
  • on 2010-03-13 23:14:50
  • Member status
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Categories: Domestic Science.

Tags: physics, chemistry.

 

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What is this setup?

Back in the early 60s I knew a man with a keen interest in science.  He   explained to me how he had developed an analogue memory which consisted of a shallow rectangular non-conducting dish filled with a super saturated solution of ? and with 2 rows of electrical contacts down opposite sides so that when an ac current of a particular frequency and waveform was made to pass from a contact on one side to a contact on the other side it set up a crystalised path with the waveform of the current. Many such waves could be set up in the same dish, even crossing each other which could then be used as wave "gates" for that particular frequency and waveform. I do not know what the solution was and I would guess that it would be rather sensitive to knocks and movement.


sssss
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sssss
 (no votes)

What his particular setup was i could not say, but it sounds as though he had constructed a rather charming mercury delay line. The rough principle is that you send off a signal (basically a sound wave) through your medium (in this case mercury) and set up a detector to listen for the echo. if there was an echo, you repeated the signal and kept on doing it every few milliseconds as necessary. such a signal could count as a stored binary "one". An absence of signal would be a stored binary zero. If your pathway through the mercury was long enough, you could store a whole string of bits in one column of mercury.

The Ferranti Mercury computers in the 1950s used loops of mercury for their main storage. It was not the only possible delay line medium, but it did have certain technical advantages.

Go well,

 

Jon

 

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  • Asked by JAS
  • on 2010-03-13 23:14:50
  • Member status
  • none

Categories: Domestic Science.

Tags: physics, chemistry.

 

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2 matches found


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