File:Edison light bulb with plate.jpg

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Edison_light_bulb_with_plate.jpg(298 × 402 pixels, file size: 38 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

Summary

Description
English: A replica of one of the bulbs with which Thomas Alva Edison discovered the Edison Effect (thermionic emission) in the early 1880s. Made by Clayton H. Sharp in 1921 as an experiment to see if Edison's bulb could be used like a Fleming valve as a detector in a radio receiver to rectify radio waves. It worked.

It consists of an Edison incandescent light bulb, an evacuated glass bulb with a hairpin shaped bamboo carbon filament, with an additional platinum plate (visible between the arms of the filament) attached to wires emerging from the base of the bulb. A current through the filament heated it white-hot. Edison discovered that the hot filament emitted negatively-charged particles (later discovered to be electrons) an effect that was called the Edison effect. He demonstrated this by applying a separate voltage between the filament and plate. When the plate had a positive voltage, the electrons were attracted to it and a current flowed through the tube from filament to plate. When the plate had a negative voltage, the electrons were repelled so no current flowed through the tube. Edison found no practical use for this effect, but in 1904 John Ambrose Fleming invented a similar tube called the Fleming valve which was used to rectify radio signals in the first radio receivers, which evolved into the diode vacuum tube.

Alterations to image: partially removed aliasing artifacts (crosshatched lines in background) due to scanning of halftone photo using FFT filter in GIMP.
Date
Source Downloaded August 14, 2013 from Clayton H. Sharp (January 1922) "The Edison Effect and it's modern applications", Journal of the AIEE, Vol. 41, No. 1, American Institute of Electrical Engineers, New York, p. 75, fig. 10 on Google Books
Author Clayton H. Sharp

Licensing

Public domain
Public domain
This media file is in the public domain in the United States. This applies to U.S. works where the copyright has expired, often because its first publication occurred prior to January 1, 1929, and if not then due to lack of notice or renewal. See this page for further explanation.

United States
United States
This image might not be in the public domain outside of the United States; this especially applies in the countries and areas that do not apply the rule of the shorter term for US works, such as Canada, Mainland China (not Hong Kong or Macao), Germany, Mexico, and Switzerland. The creator and year of publication are essential information and must be provided. See Wikipedia:Public domain and Wikipedia:Copyrights for more details.

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current18:16, 2 May 2021Thumbnail for version as of 18:16, 2 May 2021298 × 402 (38 KB)MaterialscientistFFT
03:41, 15 August 2013Thumbnail for version as of 03:41, 15 August 2013298 × 402 (17 KB)ChetvornoUser created page with UploadWizard
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