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单词 vacuum tube
释义

vacuum tube


vacuum tube

n. An electron tube from which all or most of the gas has been removed, permitting electrons to move with low interaction with any remaining gas molecules.

vacuum tube

or

vacuum valve

n (Electronics) another name for valve3

vac′uum tube`


n. an electron tube from which almost all air or gas has been evacuated.

vacuum tube

An electron tube from which all air has been removed so that the moving electrons don't collide with any gas particles and can move more efficiently from one electrode to the other. Cathode-ray tubes, which include television picture tubes and other video display tubes, are the most widely used vacuum tubes. Compare electron tube.
Thesaurus
Noun1.vacuum tube - electronic device consisting of a system of electrodes arranged in an evacuated glass or metal envelopevacuum tube - electronic device consisting of a system of electrodes arranged in an evacuated glass or metal envelopeelectron tube, thermionic tube, thermionic vacuum tube, thermionic valve, tubeacorn tube - a small vacuum tube; used at high frequenciesanode - a positively charged electrode by which electrons leave an electrical devicecathode - a negatively charged electrode that is the source of electrons entering an electrical devicecircuit, electric circuit, electrical circuit - an electrical device that provides a path for electrical current to flowdiode, rectifying tube, rectifying valve - a thermionic tube having two electrodes; used as a rectifierelectrode - a conductor used to make electrical contact with some part of a circuitelectronic device - a device that accomplishes its purpose electronicallyelectron multiplier - a vacuum tube that amplifies a flow of electronsgas-discharge tube - a tube in which an electric discharge takes place through a gascontrol grid, grid - an electrode placed between the cathode and anode of a vacuum tube to control the flow of electrons through the tubeklystron - an electron tube used to generate or amplify electromagnetic radiation in the microwave region by velocity modulationmagnetron - a diode vacuum tube in which the flow of electrons from a central cathode to a cylindrical anode is controlled by crossed magnetic and electric fields; used mainly in microwave oscillatorspentode - a thermionic tube having five electrodesplate - the positively charged electrode in a vacuum tubetelevision pickup tube, television-camera tube - a tube that rapidly scans an optical image and converts it into electronic signalstetrode - a thermionic tube having four electrodestriode - a thermionic vacuum tube having three electrodes; fluctuations of the charge on the grid control the flow from cathode to anode which makes amplification possibleX-ray tube - a vacuum tube containing a metal target onto which a beam of electrons is directed at high energy for the generation of X rays
Translations
лампа

vacuum tube


vacuum tube:

see electron tubeelectron 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).
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Vacuum Tube

 

(in Russian, elektronnaia lampa), an electron-tube device whose operation is based on a change in a stream of electrons emitted from a cathode and traveling in a vacuum by an electric field formed by means of electrodes. Depending on their output power, vacuum tubes are classified as receiving tubes or as oscillator tubes. The output power of receiving tubes is not higher than 10 watts (W); that of oscillator tubes is higher than 10 W.

The first vacuum tubes—vacuum diodes and triodes—were developed in the early 20th century on the basis of the production technology for incandescent lamps. They very much resembled incandescent lamps in appearance, having a glass bulb with a tungsten filament serving as the cathode in the center. (The word lampa [“lamp”] in the Russian term elektronnaia lampa underscores the similarity between early vacuum tubes and incandescent lamps; the adjective elektronnaia [“electron”] indicates the fundamental differences between the two. Although the appearance of vacuum tubes had changed considerably as early as the 1930’s, so that vacuum tubes no longer resembled incandescent lamps, the word lampa has been retained to this day in the Russian term.)

In the first half of the 20th century, vacuum tubes had a decisive influence on the evolution of radio engineering. Such tubes served as the basis for the development of radio communication, radio broadcasting, television, radar, and—for first-generation computers—computer technology. Between 1921 and 1941, the annual world output of vacuum tubes increased from a million to hundreds of millions. However, advances in semiconductor electronics made the further development of radio equipment based on receiving tubes no longer worthwhile. In the 1960’s and 1970’s, the development of such equipment was discontinued. As a result, the annual world production of receiving tubes decreased by roughly a factor of three between 1960 and 1975.

Nevertheless, advances in semiconductor electronics did not affect the development of oscillator tubes, since the output power of radio-frequency semiconductor devices does not exceed 10–100 watts. The oscillator tubes produced today include triodes and tetrodes. They are characterized by a power rating of 50 W to 3 megawatts (MW) in the continuous mode and of up to 10 MW in the pulsed mode. In the development of new types of oscillator tubes, primary attention is given to such considerations as reducing the grid current and raising the power amplification factor to 25–30 decibels (dB). Another consideration is the linearity of the grid-plate transfer characteristic, that is, the linearity of the dependence of the plate current on the control-grid voltage; in present-day tubes, third-order distortions have been reduced to –45 dB. A fourth consideration is increasing the efficiency of oscillator tubes. For example, in triodes with magnetic electron focusing, the efficiency may be as high as 90 percent. Such triodes are used for high-frequency heating.

REFERENCES

Vlasov, V. F. Elektronnye i ionnye pribory, 3rd ed. Moscow, 1960.
Yingst, T., et al. “Lampy bol’shoi moshchnosti s setochnym upravleniem—1972 g.” Trudy Instituta inzhenerov po elektrotekhnike i radioelektronike, 1973, vol. 61, no. 3, pp. 121–52. (Translated from English.)
Kleiner, E. Iu. Osnovy teorii elektronnykh lamp. Moscow, 1974.

V. F. KOVALENKO

vacuum tube

[′vak·yəm ‚tüb] (electronics) An electron tube evacuated to such a degree that its electrical characteristics are essentially unaffected by the presence of residual gas or vapor.

vacuum tube

electron tube

vacuum tube

An electronic device that controls the flow of electrons in a vacuum. It is used as a switch, amplifier or display screen (CRT). Used as on/off switches, vacuum tubes allowed the first computers to perform digital computations. Although tubes made a comeback in high-end stereo components, they have long since been abandoned for TVs and computer monitors. See vacuum tube types, audiophile, tube amplifier and Vintage Radio Museum.


Early Vacuum Tube
Early vacuum tubes were used to amplify signals for radio and other audio devices. This one was made in 1915. Tubes were not used as switches in calculating machines until 1939. (Image courtesy of AT&T.)







Tubes in the 21st Century
Many audiophiles claim vacuum tubes amplify music better than transistors. These high-end Model One amplifiers (collectively weighing 212 pounds) were designed by legendary audio engineer Mark Levinson.







All Kinds
Vacuum tubes have come in myriad shapes and sizes over the years, and the Vintage Radio and Communications Museum has one of the finest collections. (Images courtesy of Vintage Radio and Communications Museum of Connecticut, www.vrcmct.org)

vacuum tube


vac·uum tube

a glass tube from which the air has been removed, containing two or more electrodes, between which passes an electrical current or spark; used in the production of x-rays, or to control circuits. Previously in wide use, the vacuum tube has been supplanted by transistors in electronic circuits.

vacuum tube

A vessel of insulating material (usually glass) that is sealed and has a vacuum sufficiently high to permit the free flow of electrons between the electrodes that extend into the tube from the outside. In England, it is called a vacuum valve.
AcronymsSeevideo tape

vacuum tube


  • noun

Synonyms for vacuum tube

noun electronic device consisting of a system of electrodes arranged in an evacuated glass or metal envelope

Synonyms

  • electron tube
  • thermionic tube
  • thermionic vacuum tube
  • thermionic valve
  • tube

Related Words

  • acorn tube
  • anode
  • cathode
  • circuit
  • electric circuit
  • electrical circuit
  • diode
  • rectifying tube
  • rectifying valve
  • electrode
  • electronic device
  • electron multiplier
  • gas-discharge tube
  • control grid
  • grid
  • klystron
  • magnetron
  • pentode
  • plate
  • television pickup tube
  • television-camera tube
  • tetrode
  • triode
  • X-ray tube
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