I submit
it's a sophistic rhetorical electronics riddle. And a control system exercise.
1. Absence of DC coupling assures it'll saturate.
2. Dueling opamps compete for control of same node.
3. Extraneous parts are thrown into confuse us.
Left pointing opamp call him Louie,
tries to hold his inverting input at zero, same as his noninverting input
because that's what opamp circuits do, hold inputs equal.
Right pointing opamp call him Ralph,
tries to raise his inverting input to same as his noninverting input
because that's what opamp circuits do .
But - Those two inverting inputs share a node.
So who will win control of that node?
I say Louie will win because he controls the noninverting input to Ralph.I submit (what others have already said):
1. Build this with real opamps and it should go to a rail when C1 and C2 charge because of input offsets
2. Build this with real opamps and it'll probably oscillate as fast as the opamps can slew.
3. R4 does nothing. C1 and R3 only reduce Ralph's gain.
So i removed all three parts to simplify thinking. See picture...
Toning down Ralph's gain via R3 and C1 just might keep it stable long enough to watch it integrate to a rail.
I'd like to see somebody breadboard it with 5 meg resistors and 5uf capacitors.
What do you guys think ?
Ralph has some transfer function
If we call that G, and call Louie a negative feedback H of 1,
what's closed loop response G/(GH+1) ?