OMG, good find. All I can say is now I finally know why his work was so, for the lack of a better word, sensational.Some of Van Gogh's masterpieces stitched together. It's very much worth a look:
https://static.kuula.io/share/79QMS...humbs=1&lang=es&chromeless=0&logo=0&from=lbus
Are you sure that your last post belongs to this thread, Sam?Apparently some confusion as to what I was looking at. As the Rc increased, I measured the Ice current. I then divided the 10V Vcc by the Ice current to find the overall resistance. That overall resistance did NOT stepwise increase as I increased Rc by 100Ω steps. Here is what happened. I have circled the 2 areas of interest. I looked at the overall resistance as V/I and the change (delta R) for each step increase in Rc.
View attachment 230234
OMG, good find. All I can say is now I finally know why his work was so, for the lack of a better word, sensational.
Good find, Thank you. Truly inspiring.
kv
An argument could be made that the human mind is a part of nature..."Are scientists, then, for all their devotion to cold, hard facts, essentially artists? Where do the patterns lie from which they construct their models of reality? In nature, or in their minds?"
Of course, and yet the mind can conceive of things not found in nature.