learner6587
- Jun 12, 2024
- 3
- Joined
- Jun 12, 2024
- Messages
- 3
The light form a bulb can blink to a frequency. Suppose one chooses 0.1 Hz, the bulb will be pulsing at that frequency. If the voltage is 5 volts, the result is a straight away 5 volts peak in a burst and all light intensity at once. If instead of flashing 5 volts, one wanted the current to rise lowly from 5 volts to 10 volts each ten seconds, so that the light bulb would be rising in lumens intensity slowly up to ten volts and had its light intensity decreasing to zero volts: my question is what circuit can do that? Somebody like me which knows very little would simply get some LDR's in circle shaped string and with the help of a little motor by means of a periodically rotating shade surely the resulting pulsating voltage would make the lightbulb grow from zero to maximum slowly periodically yet this approach is for a person with zero knowledge in electronics, I wish I could learn a circuit that could do that without the need of a rotating shade on top of LDR's, any ideas? What circuit can make a light bulb grows from zero to maximum slowly?A dimmer does the job but is not periodical without the human hand turning up and down the knob constantly.