Analog Computers: Digital vs. Theoretical Possibilities

In summary, digital computers were created to function with on/off data, but it is possible to construct an analog computer. Analog computers have been around for a long time and are more efficient than digital computers.
  • #1
ISamson
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There are two types of 'reading'. Digital and analog. There are digital computers, which function with 'on' and 'off' data. But can it possible to construct an analog computer? Can it be theoretically possible?
 
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  • #2
ISamson said:
There are two types of 'reading'. Digital and analog. There are digital computers, which function with 'on' and 'off' data. But can it possible to construct an analog computer? Can it be theoretically possible?
Not only theoretically: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_computer
In the end it depends on what you allow to be called a computer. There are even more examples on other Wikipedia language pages, so I suppose those examples can also be found in English on some webpages.
 
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Do you think this is relevant: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antikythera_mechanism

It is probably the world's first scientific calculator discovered in a shipwreck in 1901. Apparently it was built by the Ancient Greeks. Analog computers have been around a long time.
 
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  • #6
ISamson said:
Greeks had computers. Cool!
Well, a mechanism to be precise...
But still a computer, again, anything can be a computer. I like to think of a computer as a man-made machine with automated computational abilities. So this would include something like the Antikythera machine, but would exclude an abacus.
 
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Why are analog computres utilised nowadays, how are they useful or more convenient in some ways than digital, normal, computers?
If such analog computers are used, then how are they better than digital?
I don't understand this.
 
  • #8
ISamson said:
Why are analog computres utilised nowadays, how are they useful or more convenient in some ways than digital, normal, computers?
If such analog computers are used, then how are they better than digital?
I don't understand this.
Well, for starters they won't require electricity. I don't think the Ancient Greeks had anything like electricity so how in the world would they make a digital computer. In today's world, I can't think of any advantage besides not needing electricity. Analog computers are simply too big and bulky and do too little. Simple multiplication machines are the sizes of rooms (you could make it smaller and more efficient, but why?).
 
  • #9
lekh2003 said:
But still a computer, again, anything can be a computer. I like to think of a computer as a man-made machine with automated computational abilities.

A computer is a device that can be instructed to carry out arbitrary sequences of arithmetic or logical operations automatically. The ability of computers to follow generalized sets of operations, called programs, enables them to perform an extremely wide range of tasks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer

I think it is more accurate to think of it as a device capable of operating logic in computationally and mathenatically logical ways.
 
  • #10
ISamson said:
I think it is more accurate to think of it as a device capable of operating logic in computationally and mathenatically logical ways.
Well that's the definition of automated computational abilities.
 
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  • #11
lekh2003 said:
I can't think of any advantage besides not needing electricity.

How does a computer not need electricity? How on earth?
 
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A slide rule is certainly a computer, because you can do computations with it. And it is without electricity as well as analog.
 
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In recent years, analog computers have proven to be much more efficient at simulating biological systems than digital computers. But existing analog computers have to be programmed by hand, a complex process that would be prohibitively time consuming for large-scale simulations.
The work could help pave the way to highly efficient, highly accurate analog simulations of entire organs, if not organisms.
http://news.mit.edu/2016/analog-computing-organs-organisms-0620
 
  • #15
ISamson said:
Yeah, but then again, they just said how difficult it is. You have to mechanically fix everything, not as easy as coding. To create a fully functioning organism, the analog computer would take decades to build and would occupy a city.
 
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  • #16
lekh2003 said:
You can find this stuff online, my friend.
If you are talking about mechanical, not electrical, or silicon computing, then you are totally right!
 
  • #17
ISamson said:
Why are analog computres utilised nowadays, how are they useful or more convenient in some ways than digital, normal, computers?
If such analog computers are used, then how are they better than digital?
I don't understand this.
Nowadays this art can be considered as a dead end. There are still some examples when analog functions are implemented with the knowledge and parts originated from analog computers, but that's all. Microcontrollers and AD-DA converters are so cheap, that most cases it's just faster, cheaper and more flexible to do everything digital.

In theory, analog computers were way more sturdy in some environments, and such things like a random high energy particle was just a source of some additional error instead of a deathblow (like it is for a common digital circuit).
 
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  • #18
Analog computer can be easily an electrical one. Nothing unusual to use an electrical circuit to simulate a process and read the results from a voltmeter.

My Mom in front of an analog electrical grid simulator, early sixties:

18839765_1390858167665264_3090276336870746843_o.jpg
 

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  • #20
Borek said:
Analog computer can be easily an electrical one. Nothing unusual to use an electrical circuit to simulate a process and read the results from a voltmeter.

Voltimeter? That easy?
Do you have a link?
 
  • #22
ISamson said:
Voltimeter? That easy?
It's just unusual but not really different than what you get from a common calculator...
 
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  • #23
Rive said:
It's just unusual but not really different than what you get from a common calculator...

Completely different. Do you understand the difference between analog and digital?
 
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  • #24
Borek said:
Completely different. Do you understand the difference between analog and digital?
Yes. In this case: around 1% accuracy vs. 8 digit accuracy.

(C'mon, both are simple, one dimensional readings...)
 
  • #25
ISamson said:
Greeks had computers. Cool!
Well, a mechanism to be precise...
Keep in mind that the word "computer" was first applied to PEOPLE, not machines.
 
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Even in the modern day the "flight control computers" on some aircraft are all analog (granted the products in design now are not).
 
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http://www.popularmechanics.com/mil...r-were-a-mid-century-engineering-masterpiece/
So the B-29 had one of the first advanced electronic computing systems that were not the size of a room during ww2. Read the above article!

TLDR: The B-29 was pressurized so to utilize less crew and allow the crew to properly aim weapons, the machine gun turrets were controlled via an analog computer and remote control. They even had logic to prevent the aircraft hitting itself.
 
  • #28
Rive said:
Yes. In this case: around 1% accuracy vs. 8 digit accuracy.

(C'mon, both are simple, one dimensional readings...)

There is no such thing as a purely digital voltmeter. A digital voltmeter is an analog voltmeter with a digital interface to the outside world along with possibly (depending on the model) some process and function handling in the digital domain as well.

His question was not regarding accuracy. It was do you understand the differences beneath the hood.
 
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  • #29
Here is a water based analogue computer from 1949 running a simulation of the UK economy...
 
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  • #30
donpacino said:
There is no such thing as a purely digital voltmeter.
Since the topic is about (analog) computing, the analog/digital measurement is completely off. What matters is, the type of output, what's a single number in this case: the same what a common (digital) calculator would provide. To mix in the type of output is kind of like setting up categories on computer performance according to display type (CRT, LCD).
That was behind my slightly sarcastic answer about accuracy.
 
  • #31
Rive said:
That was behind my slightly sarcastic answer about accuracy.

It was a VERY relevant question posed to you that you did not fully answer and partially answered with sarcasm.

Rive said:
Since the topic is about (analog) computing, the analog/digital measurement is completely off. What matters is, the type of output, what's a single number in this case: the same what a common calculator would provide. To mix in the type of output is kind of like setting up categories on computer performance according to display type (CRT, LCD).

That is not true at all. How things work under the hood can very much effect the outcome, regardless of the data presentation, which leads me to follow up with Borek's question, do you know the difference between analog and digital. It's not just about display type.
 
  • #32
donpacino said:
It was a VERY relevant question posed to you that you did not fully answer and partially answered with sarcasm.
If you are so into hair splitting then please notice that in that answer I already used percents and digits.

To clarify - the answer for that question is 'YES'.
 
  • #33
Rive said:
If you are so into hair splitting then please notice that in that answer I already used percents and digits.

To clarify - the answer for that irrelevant question is 'YES'.

Digital systems can report in % accuracy too, referring to the difference between analog and digital domains as percents vs digits implies you don't understand the difference. You also referred to a voltmeter comment with "It's just unusual but not really different than what you get from a common calculator..." which implies you don't have a good level of understanding, as there are older calculators that compute using analog methods. Responding to people trying to help you by being sarcastic and rude is not good form.
 
  • #34
Borek said:
Completely different. Do you understand the difference between analog and digital?

I do. I think I do.
Digital can be either two states, High or Low in measurment, or 1 or 0 in computing. Analog can be any state or value possible.
I like to think of it as time measurment: digital and analog clocks. Digital can either be 21:02:45 or 21:02:46. Nothing in between. Analog can be basically anything in between the two seconds, minutes or hours. Is that accurate?
phinds said:
Keep in mind that the word "computer" was first applied to PEOPLE, not machines.
How?
Thank you for all the replys.
 
  • #35
ISamson said:
How?
You should learn to use Google.

Word Origin and History for computer n. 1640s, "one who calculates,"
 
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