Water integrator
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The Water Integrator was an early analog computer built in the Soviet Union in 1936. It functioned by careful manipulation of water through a room full of interconnected pipes and pumps. The water level in various chambers (with precision to fractions of a millimeter) represented stored numbers, and the rate of flow between them represented mathematical operations. This machine was capable of solving non-homogeneous differential equations.
Water analog computers were used in USSR until the 1980s for large scale modelling.
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[edit] External links
- MIT water computer
- Aron-Rady Rippling Water Adder-Restricted