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Analog device
Analog device
from Wikipedia

Analog devices are a combination of both analog machine and analog media that can together measure, record, reproduce, receive or broadcast continuous information, for example, the almost infinite number of grades of transparency, voltage, resistance, rotation, or pressure.[1] In theory, the continuous information in an analog signal has an infinite number of possible values with the only limitation on resolution being the accuracy of the analog device.

Analog media are materials with analog properties, such as photographic film, which are used in analog devices, such as cameras.

Example devices

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Non-electrical

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There are notable non-electrical analog devices, such as some clocks (sundials, water clocks), the astrolabe, slide rules, the governor of a steam engine, the planimeter (a simple device that measures the surface area of a closed shape), Kelvin's mechanical tide predictor, acoustic rangefinders, servomechanisms (e.g. the thermostat), a simple mercury thermometer, a weighing scale, and the speedometer.

Electrical

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The telautograph is an analogue precursor to the modern fax machine. It transmits electrical impulses recorded by potentiometers to stepping motors attached to a pen, thus being able to reproduce a drawing or signature made by the sender at the receiver's station. It was the first such device to transmit drawings to a stationary sheet of paper; previous inventions in Europe used rotating drums to make such transmissions.

An analog synthesizer is a synthesizer that uses analog circuits and analog computer techniques to generate sound electronically.

The analog television encodes television and transports the picture and sound information as an analog signal, that is, by varying the amplitude and/or frequencies of the broadcast signal. All systems preceding digital television, such as NTSC, PAL, and SECAM are analog television systems.

An analog computer is a form of computer that uses electrical, mechanical, or hydraulic phenomena to model the problem being solved. More generally an analog computer uses one kind of physical quantity to represent the behavior of another physical system, or mathematical function. Modeling a real physical system in a computer is called simulation.

Example processes

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Media

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The chemical reactions in photographic film and film stock involve analog processes, with camera as machinery.

Interfacing the digital and analog worlds

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In electronics, a digital-to-analog converter is a circuit for converting a digital signal (usually binary) to an analog signal (current, voltage or electric charge). Digital-to-analog converters are interfaces between the digital world and analog worlds. An analog-to-digital converter is an electronic circuit that converts continuous signals to discrete digital numbers.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
An analog device is a hardware component or that operates using continuously varying physical quantities to represent and process signals, such as voltages, currents, resistances, rotations, or pressures, in contrast to discrete digital representations. In the field of , analog devices form the foundation of that manipulate continuous signals to replicate or interpret real-world phenomena like sound waves, light intensity, or fluctuations. These devices rely on components such as resistors, capacitors, inductors, diodes, and transistors operating in linear modes to amplify, filter, or condition signals without converting them to binary states. Unlike digital devices, which process in fixed steps and offer immunity through error correction, analog devices provide infinite resolution within their but are susceptible to and , necessitating precise design for accuracy. Key applications of analog devices span audio processing, where microphones and amplifiers convert and enhance acoustic signals; radio frequency systems, including tuners and modulators for communication; and , such as sensors for measuring physical variables in industrial and medical equipment. In contemporary , analog devices frequently integrate with digital technologies via converters—analog-to-digital (ADC) for digitizing inputs and digital-to-analog (DAC) for outputting continuous signals—enabling hybrid systems in smartphones, , and tools. This synergy underscores the enduring role of analog devices in bridging the gap between the analog nature of the physical environment and the computational efficiency of digital processing.

Definition and Fundamentals

Core Definition

An analog device is any system or component that processes, represents, or transmits information using continuous physical quantities, such as voltage, current, mechanical position, or fluid displacement, which vary smoothly over time or space to mirror real-world phenomena. These devices operate on analog signals, which are continuous waveforms capable of conveying an infinite range of values within a given and , in contrast to digital devices that rely on discrete binary states. Key characteristics of analog devices include their theoretical infinite resolution, allowing for arbitrarily fine gradations without quantization steps, though practical implementations are limited by physical constraints. They exhibit direct proportionality between input and output signals in linear systems, providing a natural representation of varying inputs like sound waves or changes. However, analog devices are inherently susceptible to noise and from environmental interference, which can degrade during processing or transmission. Basic examples illustrate these principles: a mercury uses the continuous rise and fall of liquid level to analogize temperature variations, while a vinyl record encodes audio through the continuously varying depth and width of its grooves, which a traces to reproduce . In , an refers to the continuous medium of information itself, whereas an analog device is the hardware that manipulates it; this distinguishes both from hybrid systems, which combine analog and digital elements for mixed processing.

Signal Representation

In analog devices, signals are represented as continuous functions of time, where the signal value varies smoothly without discrete steps, such as a voltage V(t)V(t) defined for all real values of tt. This continuous-time nature allows the signal to capture infinite possible values within any time interval, mirroring physical phenomena like varying electrical potentials or mechanical displacements. Similarly, spatial variations can represent signals, as seen in waves propagating through air in acoustic systems, where the signal is a function of position and time. The mathematical foundation of analog signal representation relies on sinusoidal waves as fundamental building blocks, since most real-world analog signals can be decomposed into sums of these sinusoids via . A basic sinusoidal signal is described by the equation y(t)=Asin(2πft+ϕ),y(t) = A \sin(2\pi f t + \phi), where AA is the (peak value), ff is the (cycles per unit time), and ϕ\phi is the phase shift. This form encapsulates the periodic, continuous variation essential to analog processing, enabling devices to respond proportionally to input changes. Physically, these continuous signals manifest in diverse implementations across analog devices. For instance, electromagnetic waves serve as analog signals in antennas, where varying electric and magnetic field strengths propagate information over distances. Fluid levels in mechanical gauges provide another example, with height directly corresponding to a continuous pressure or volume signal transduced into mechanical displacement. In optical sensors, light intensity variations are represented analogously, often converted to current or voltage proportional to photon flux for detection. The continuous representation in analog devices inherently permits natural variations that reflect real-world imperfections, but it also introduces challenges like thermal noise, arising from the random thermal motion of charge carriers in conductive materials. This noise manifests as a , random fluctuation superimposed on the signal, degrading and setting fundamental limits on signal-to-noise ratios in practical systems.

Historical Development

Pre-20th Century Origins

The origins of analog devices trace back to ancient civilizations, where mechanical systems were developed to represent and measure continuous physical quantities. One of the earliest examples is the , or clepsydra, which utilized the steady flow of water to track time intervals. Dating to around 1400 BCE and found at the Temple of Amun-Re in during the reign of Egyptian pharaoh , the oldest surviving clepsydra consisted of a stone vessel that allowed water to drip at a constant rate, with markings indicating elapsed time as the level changed continuously. Similar devices appeared in by the 16th century BCE, employing outflow mechanisms to provide a proportional analog representation of time through fluid displacement. These instruments demonstrated the fundamental principle of analog measurement by mapping a continuous physical process—water flow—to a scalable output, predating more precise timekeeping methods. Another notable ancient analog device is the , recovered from a off the Greek island of and dated to approximately 150–100 BCE. This bronze-geared apparatus functioned as an , predicting astronomical positions, eclipses, and calendar cycles through interconnected mechanical dials and pointers, showcasing advanced continuous simulation of far ahead of its time. In the , mechanical innovations advanced analog computation through devices that manipulated physical scales for mathematical operations. The , invented by English mathematician around 1622, built on John Napier's 1614 introduction of logarithms to enable , division, and other calculations via sliding logarithmic scales. Users aligned the scales to perform operations proportionally, with the position of the slide providing a continuous analog readout of results, such as products or roots, without discrete digits. This tool became essential for engineers and scientists, illustrating how physical alignment could model continuous mathematical relationships. The 19th century marked the transition toward electrical analogs, with inventions that harnessed continuous variations in physical phenomena for signaling and recording. In 1820, German physicist Johann Schweigger developed the first , an electromagnetic device that deflected a needle proportionally to the strength of an , serving as an early analog indicator for measuring electrical quantities. Building on this, Samuel Morse's 1837 electromagnetic telegraph transmitted messages over wires using pulsed electrical currents, where variations in signal duration represented coded information, laying groundwork for electrical communication systems. A pivotal milestone in mechanical sound reproduction came in 1877 with Thomas Edison's , which captured audio waves as continuous helical grooves on a rotating tinfoil cylinder via a vibrating diaphragm and , allowing playback through analogous mechanical vibration. These developments highlighted the shift from purely mechanical to electromechanical analogs, emphasizing continuous representation in and transmission.

20th Century Advancements

The marked a pivotal shift in from mechanical foundations to electrical and electronic systems, enabling more precise and computation. In the early electrical era, the invention of the amplifier by in 1904 revolutionized radio technology by providing a reliable means to detect and amplify weak radio signals through in a two-electrode , known as the . This device overcame limitations of earlier detectors like the , facilitating practical wireless communication over long distances, as demonstrated in Marconi's transatlantic transmissions shortly thereafter. Advancements in analog computing accelerated in with the development of differential analyzers, which integrated mechanical and early electrical components to solve complex differential equations mechanically. Vannevar Bush's 1931 differential analyzer at MIT, for instance, used shafts, gears, and integrators to model dynamic systems like ballistic trajectories, achieving solutions to sixth-order equations with an accuracy of about 0.1% through continuous variable representation. These machines laid the groundwork for electrical analogs by incorporating amplifiers for scaling outputs, influencing applications in and before electronic computers emerged. Following , the transistor's invention at in 1947 by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain, and dramatically miniaturized analog circuits, replacing bulky vacuum tubes with solid-state semiconductors that amplified signals with lower power consumption and higher reliability. This enabled compact analog electronics in consumer and industrial devices. Concurrently, operational amplifiers (op-amps), pioneered in the through wartime efforts at places like and George A. Philbrick's company, provided versatile building blocks for ; early models like the 1941 direct-coupled amplifiers handled DC signals for feedback control systems, evolving into commercial units like the K2-W in the 1950s for computing and instrumentation. By the mid-20th century, analog devices reached a peak in specialized applications before the digital transition gained momentum. In music, Robert Moog's 1964 introduced voltage-controlled analog oscillators and filters, allowing musicians to generate and shape sounds continuously, as seen in early performances by Herb Deutsch that popularized electronic composition. In the space race, analog components were integral to NASA's simulations and subsystems during the 1960s; for example, hydraulic analog computers modeled spacecraft dynamics in real-time for Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions, ensuring accurate guidance despite the primary digital onboard computers. These innovations highlighted analog devices' strengths in real-time, continuous processing, though their decline began as digital alternatives offered greater precision and scalability by the 1970s.

Operating Principles

Continuous Signal Processing

Analog devices perform continuous signal processing by manipulating time-varying signals in real time through linear and nonlinear operations that preserve the continuous nature of the input waveform. Key techniques include filtering, which selectively attenuates specific frequency components to shape the signal spectrum; for instance, a low-pass filter allows frequencies below a cutoff to pass while attenuating higher ones, and a high-pass filter does the opposite. In a simple RC low-pass filter, the cutoff frequency is determined by the resistor-capacitor time constant, given by fc=12πRC,f_c = \frac{1}{2\pi RC}, where RR is the resistance and CC is the capacitance, marking the point where the output amplitude drops to 1/21/\sqrt{2}
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