What Causes the Charging Sound of a Capacitor?

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The charging sound of a capacitor, such as in a camera flash or defibrillator, is primarily caused by the inverter that converts low DC voltage to a high-frequency AC signal to charge the capacitor. This process involves stepping up the voltage to around 600 volts, which is necessary for the flash discharge. The sound produced is likely a subharmonic of the inverter's frequency, which is typically above human hearing range. Similar sounds can be heard in devices like synthesizers and backlit displays, which also use inverters for voltage conversion. Overall, the pitch of the sound increases as the capacitor charges and then fades out as the charging process completes.
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when you charge a capacitor (camera flash for instance) you hear a sound that increases in pitch and dies out

i wonder what causes that ?

i think you also hear in on tv when they charge the defibrillator before they zap someone to restart the heart
 
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I believe that sound is caused by the inverter that is used to charge the capacitor. In a camera, the capacitor used to discharge energy through the flash is around 600 volts and a couple of microfarads, but the battery is only a few volts DC. The inverter converts the DC to a high frequency square wave, and then that AC voltage is stepped up to the high DC voltage needed to charge the capacitor (since voltage multipliers only work with AC). I think in most cases the inverter frequency is above the range of human hearing, so it might be some subharmonic of the inverter frequency that we hear. I assume the same sort of thing is going on in a defibrillator.

I have an old Roland synthesizer with a display that also uses an inverter to step up the DC power supply to the 90 volts or so needed to run the electroluminescent backlight, and it whines like crazy. I can also hear a similar noise if I listen closely to my old PalmPilot that has a backlit diplay.
 
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