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The Flux Capacitor as seen in a replica DeLorean Time Machine. The flux capacitor, which consists of a rectangular-shaped compartment with three flashing Geissler-style tubes arranged in a "Y" configuration, is described by Doc as "what makes time travel possible". The device is the core component of the time machine.
Invented by Dr. Greene, this version of the DeLorean features green fluid tubes around the car’s body resembling the wiring on the outside, a round core connected to these tubes is in the same position as the flux capacitor, and the gauge meters in the cockpit resemble the ones (including the alarm clock) seen on the inside of the DeLorean ...
The criminal trial was fresh in memory when the DMC-12 — equipped with the mysterious "flux capacitor" — served as a time machine in the 1985 hit "Back to the Future," enshrining it in pop ...
DeLorean time machine#Flux capacitor To a section : This is a redirect from a topic that does not have its own page to a section of a page on the subject. For redirects to embedded anchors on a page, use {{ R to anchor }} instead .
Lego's newest car set is based on the time-traveling DeLorean from 'Back to the Future.' ... the flux capacitor lights up with the push of a button, and the slightly shiny silver exterior looks ...
DeLorean Motor Company, former automobile manufacturer, based in North America; DMC DeLorean, the single automobile produced by the DeLorean Motor Company; DeLorean time machine, the fictional time machine with a flux capacitor built into a DeLorean that is featured in the Back to the Future trilogy
I read somewhere that the flux capacitor was part of genuine time travel theory, and that was why it was used for the film. It was a few years ago that I read this, but apparently the flux capacitor kind of anchors the time travel device to the Earth's magnetic field so that when it comes out of time travel, it is in the same place it started.
A mechanical network diagram of a simple resonator (top) and one possible electrical analogy for it (bottom) In an electrical network diagram, limited to linear systems, there are three passive elements: resistance, inductance, and capacitance; and two active elements: the voltage generator, and the current generator.