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vacuum tube |
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vacuum tube: see electron tube electron tube, device consisting of a sealed enclosure in which electrons flow between electrodes separated either by a vacuum (in a vacuum tube) or by an ionized gas at low pressure (in a gas tube). ..... Click the link for more information. . vacuum tubeElectron tube consisting of a sealed glass or metal enclosure from which the air has been withdrawn. It was used in early electronic circuitry to control a flow of electrons. In the first half of the 20th century, vacuum tubes allowed the development of radio broadcasting, long-distance telephone service, television, and the first electronic digital computers, which were the largest vacuum-tube systems ever built. Transistors have replaced them in virtually all applications, but they are still occasionally used in display devices for television sets and computers (cathode-ray tubes), in microwave ovens, and as high-frequency transmitters on space satellites. vacuum tubeAn electronic device that controls the flow of electrons in a vacuum. It is used as a switch, amplifier or display screen. Used as on/off switches, they allowed the first computers to perform digital computations. Although vacuum tubes have made a comeback in high-end stereo components, most vacuum tubes today are the picture tubes (CRTs) in monitors and TVs. See vacuum tube types.
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In 1949 the magazine argued that in 50 years, "Where a calculator like the ENIAC today is equipped with 18,000 vacuum tubes and weighs 30 tons, computers in the future may have only 1000 vacuum tubes and perhaps weigh only 1. Before the 1950s, large rooms filled with vacuum tubes and wires were used to perform even the simplest mathematical calculations. Roentgen was experimenting with vacuum tubes in a dim room when he noticed that a nearby plate, that had been coated with barium platinocyanide, began to glow. |
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