thermionic valve

electronics
Also known as: Fleming valve, kenotron, thermionic tube, vacuum diode

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development of electronics

  • transistor
    In electronics: The vacuum tube era

    Coolidge and Fleming’s thermionic valve (a two-electrode vacuum tube) for use in radio receivers. The detection of a radio signal, which is a very high-frequency alternating current (AC), requires that the signal be rectified; i.e., the alternating current must be converted into a direct current (DC) by a…

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  • International Space Station
    In history of technology: Communications

    …was the development of the thermionic valve, a device for rectifying (that is, converting a high-frequency oscillating signal into a unidirectional current capable of registering as a sound) an electromagnetic wave. This was essentially a development from the carbon-filament electric lightbulb. In 1883 Edison had found that in these lamps…

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work of Fleming

  • John Ambrose Fleming.
    In Sir John Ambrose Fleming

    …rectifier, which he called the thermionic valve; it is also known as the vacuum diode, kenotron, thermionic tube, and Fleming valve. This device, patented in 1904, was the first electronic rectifier of radio waves, converting alternating-current radio signals into weak direct currents detectable by a telephone receiver. Augmented by the…

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