History of Electronics PDF

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StateOfTheArtFreesia

Uploaded by StateOfTheArtFreesia

Sorsogon State University

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history of electronics electrical engineering electronics science

Summary

This document provides an overview of the key figures and inventions related to the history of electronics, starting from ancient Rome and ending with the creation of the first electronic rectifier.

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The History of Electronics The men that came up with all those formulas, theories and laws we have to know! History of Electronics Ancient Rome had batteries (Did they know what they were doing?) Ancient Greece developed a knowledge of ‘Steam power’ (didn’t want to get their...

The History of Electronics The men that came up with all those formulas, theories and laws we have to know! History of Electronics Ancient Rome had batteries (Did they know what they were doing?) Ancient Greece developed a knowledge of ‘Steam power’ (didn’t want to get their hands dirty!) Understanding started later When should we start? Electricity Dozens of people Responsible Research took several hundred years Most theories/information developed by 1900 Electronics Many individuals contributed Electrical experiments and information built the ‘base’ for Electronics Associated with Wireless developments Generally regarded as ‘starting’ about 1900 William Gilbert 1544-1603 Wrote De magnete Researched Magnetics & Static Electricity Distinguished between Magnetism and static electricity Leyden Jar Was the first Capacitor Developed by Pieter van Musscenbroech Benjamin Franklin 1706-1790 Writer and Scientist Researched Electricity Researched Weather & Meteorology Defined Positive & Negative Charges Had many other inventions! Charles Coulomb 1736-1806 Experimented in mechanical resistance Developed Coulomb’s Law for electrostatic charges Luigi Galvani 1737-1798 Studied effects of electricity on Frogs! Revealed animals had and were effected by electricity. Alessandro Volta 1745-1827 Very Interested in Electrical experiments going on in late 1700’s Invented the battery Hans Christian Oersted 1777-1851 Demonstrated that electricity effected magnetism Initiated the study of Electromagnetism Discovered Aluminum Andre Ampere 1775-1836 French Mathematician & physicist Invented the Solenoid Studied the effects of electrical currents Georg Simon Ohm 1789-1854 Experimented with Electrical circuits Made his own parts - including the wire! Discovered OHMS law - a relationship between current, voltage & resistance. Michael Faraday 1791-1867 Great pioneering experimenter in electricity and magnetism demonstrated electromagnetic induction James Prescott Joule 1818-1889 Discovered the Law of Conservation of Energy The unit of energy, Joule, is named in his honor Gustav Robert Kirchhoff 1824-1887 Known for his work on the Spectroscope Developed Kirchhoff’s Laws Sir Charles Wheatstone 1806-1876 Early work on the telegraph, photography, & electricity Developed the Concertina (accordian) Found uses for the Wheatstone Bridge Early Wheatstone Musical Instruments Early Wheatstone Concertinas James Clerk Maxwell 1831-1879 Wrote Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism in 1873 The equations in it explained Faraday’s Work and predicted Hertz’s work Heinrich Rudolph Hertz 1857-1894 Demonstrated the electromagnetic radiation predicted by Maxwell First to demonstrate the photoelectric effect Wilhelm Rontgen 1845-1923 Discovered X-Rays in 1895 X-rays were used by doctors within months Max von Laue proved they were electromagnetic in nature later (1940’s) Thomas Alva Edison 1847-1931 1093 patents including phonograph, incandescent lamp, much more Observed the “Edison effect” while inventing the electric lamp Edison 1882 Patent Lamp (carbon filament) Edison’s Kinetograph - the Motion picture machine! The Sneeze - an image from the first film! The Phonograph Nikola Tesla 1856-1943 Serbian-American Inventor and Engineer Invented: AC generators, distribution system and AC induction motors Hated by Edison Guglielmo Marconi 1874-1937 Patented Radio Telegraphy in 1896 1901 transmitted signals across the Atlantic Ocean Nobel Prize in Physics in 1909 Marconi Receiving Station, Canada Marconi & an Early Radio Set Menlo Park Laboratory World’s First Industrial Lab! John Ambrose Fleming 1849-1945 Student of Maxwell’s Worked for Edison then Marconi Invented the Fleming Valve - the first electronic rectifier or diode (1904) The Fleming Valve Early Fleming The valve used in a circuit Valves Lee De Forest 1873-1961 Held 300+ patents 1906 - invented the Audion tube, the first Triode vacuum tube 1912 cascade his tubes to increase amplification Lee Dee Forest’s Triode ‘Valve’ Walter Schottky 1886-1976 Had multiple Doctorates Defined ‘shot noise’ - random electron noise in thermionic tubes 1919 invented the multiple grid vacuum tube Edwin Howard Armstrong 1890-1954 Invented regenerative feedback and electronic oscillators 1917 invented the superheterodyne radio 1933 patented FM radio (wideband) Harold Stephen Black 1898-1983 1927 invented the idea No picture of negative feedback to available (was improve distortion probably feeling characteristics in pretty negative amplifiers about it anyway?!) Philo Taylor Farnsworth 1906-1971 1922 (age 14!) invented an electronic TV system 1927 patented his TV system Litigation with RCA ended in 1939-RCA agreed he won! William Bradford Shockley 1910-1989 Worked with Brattain and Bardeen on a team that invented the junction transistor Shared the 1956 Nobel prize with Brattain and Bardeen Walter H. Brattain 1902-1987 Worked on Radar silicon detectors Worked on the team that invented the junction transistor Shared the 1956 Nobel Prize with Bardeen and Shockley John Bardeen 1908-1991 Developed a theory of quantum surface states of electrons which led to the invention of the junction transistor Shared in the 1956 Nobel Prize with Shockley and Brattain Where do we end? This is really only the beginning - changes in electronics seem to be happening almost daily!

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