Circuit Theory/Symmetry
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Some very complicated circuits can be solved by seeing symmetry. Three examples are presented below:
Example 1
[edit | edit source]Bridge Balance
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Original Complicated Circuit
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Redrawn up and down
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Z impedances are all equal, so middle Z has no current going through it, nodes on either side are at the same EMF
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middle Z can be replaced by short or open, since no current is going through it
Example 2
[edit | edit source]Cube
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original flattened cube of resistors
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identifying identical EMF locations
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redrawing idential EMF as the same nodes, can see three groups of parallel resistors
Example 3
[edit | edit source]2D-Grid
Suppose there is an infinite 2 dimensional grid of impedances (Z). What is the input impedance if connected across (in parallel) with any given impedance?
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Current due to injection at any spot splits in quarters and then begins to fill the resistive grid like water filling an infinite bucket.
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Current removed at another spot splits in quarters and then begins to drain the resistive grid like draining an infinite bucket.
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Together the two create a steady state situtation where the question "What is the input impedance" can be asked. The current i is i/4 + i/4 = i/2. v = i/2*Z so v/i = Z/2 = input impedance.
If the grid were three dimensional, the current would split into 6 equal sections, thus the input impedance would be Z/3.
So what does this mean? It helps us understand that the infinity of space has an impedance: 376.730... ohms which is plank's impedance * 4π and is related to the speed of light, the permeability of free space and permitivity of free space.
Perhaps this is related entanglement and to the trinity since: