Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Vacuum_tube> ?p ?o }
- Vacuum_tube abstract "In electronics, vacuum tube, electron tube, tube (in North America), or valve (in Britain and some other regions) is a device that controls electric current between electrodes in an evacuated container.Vacuum tubes mostly rely on thermionic emission of electrons from a hot filament or a cathode heated by the filament. This type is called a thermionic tube or thermionic valve. A phototube, however, achieves electron emission through the photoelectric effect. Not all valves/electron tubes are evacuated "vacuum tubes"; gas-filled tubes are similar devices containing a gas, typically at low pressure, which exploit phenomena related to electric discharge in gases, usually without a heater.The simplest vacuum tube, the diode, contains only a heater, a heated electron-emitting cathode (the filament itself acts as the cathode in some diodes), and a plate (anode). Current can only flow in one direction through the device between the two electrodes, as electrons emitted by the cathode travel through the tube and are collected by the anode. Adding one or more control grids within the tube allows the current between the cathode and anode to be controlled by the voltage on the grid or grids. Tubes with grids can be used for many purposes, including amplification, rectification, switching, oscillation, and display.Invented in 1904 by John Ambrose Fleming, vacuum tubes were a basic component for electronics throughout the first half of the twentieth century, which saw the diffusion of radio, television, radar, sound reinforcement, sound recording and reproduction, large telephone networks, analog and digital computers, and industrial process control. Although some applications had counterparts using earlier technologies such as the spark gap transmitter or mechanical computers, it was the invention of the vacuum tube that made these technologies widespread and practical.In the 1940s the invention of semiconductor devices made it possible to produce solid-state devices, which are smaller, more efficient, more reliable, more durable, and cheaper than tubes.Hence, from the mid-1950s solid-state devices such as transistors gradually replaced tubes. The cathode-ray tube (CRT) remained the basis for televisions and video monitors until superseded in the 21st century. However, there are still a few applications for which tubes are preferred to semiconductors; for example, the magnetron used in microwave ovens, and certain high frequency amplifiers.".
- Vacuum_tube thumbnail Elektronenroehren-auswahl.jpg?width=300.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink make_your_own_vaccum_tube.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink v=onepage&q=van%20der%20Bijl%20Thermionic%20valve&f=false.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink tuning%2520eye%2520tubes.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink tdsl.duncanamps.com.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink vacuum-j.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink vacuum.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink rea03.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink www.chemheritage.org.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink tubes.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink www.crtsite.com.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink tubes201.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink vtf.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink events-i=39-s=0.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink tstxt.htm.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink Tube.php.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink page10.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink tubeworks.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink film_reels.php.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink www.tubecollector.org.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageExternalLink we_spec_sheets.html.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageID "32496".
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageLength "92982".
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageOutDegree "421".
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageRevisionID "682154472".
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink 12AX7.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink 6GH8.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink 6JH8.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink 6L6.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink 6SN7.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink 8974.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink DC_receiver_design.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink A_battery.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink All_American_Five.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Aluminium_oxide.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Amplifier.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Amplitude_modulated.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Amplitude_modulation.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Analog-to-digital_converter.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Analog_to_digital_converter.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Anode.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Antique_radio.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Argon.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Audio_frequency.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Audion.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Audion_tube.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Audiophile.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Automatic_gain_control.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink BBC.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink B_battery.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Backward-wave_oscillator.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Bakelite.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Barium.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Barium_oxide.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Battery_(electricity).
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Battery_(vacuum_tube).
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Battery_eliminator.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Batteryless_radio.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Beam_tetrode.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Bernard_D._H._Tellegen.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Bipolar_junction_transistor.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Black-body_radiation.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Black_body_radiation.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Bluetooth.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Bogey_device.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Bogey_value.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink British_Valve_Association.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink CT_scan.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink C_battery.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Calcium_oxide.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Capacitance.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Carcinotron.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Category:American_inventions.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Category:English_inventions.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Category:Glass_applications.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Category:Vacuum.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Category:Vacuum_tubes.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cathode.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cathode-ray_tube.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cathode_bias.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cathode_poisoning.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cathode_ray_tube.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cats-whisker_detector.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cats_whisker.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cavity_magnetron.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Ceramic.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Ciphertext.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cold_cathode.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Colossus_computer.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Compactron.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Computer.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Computers.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Consumer_Electronics_Association.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Control_grid.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Convection.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Crookes_tube.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_radio.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Crystal_set.
- Vacuum_tube wikiPageWikiLink Cunife.