The Electronics Age began as far back as the late 1800’s and, like many major advances in civilization, was the result of the separate efforts of a number of individuals whose actions, collectively, set the stage for change.<\/p>\n
In this case the stage for change was set primarily by 4 individuals whose creative actions took place on both sides of the Atlantic over a period of about 20 years.<\/p>\n
On January 27, 1880 U.S. Patent No. 223,89 (PDF) was granted to America’s most famous inventor, Thomas Alva Edison<\/a>, for an electric light bulb in which an electric current could be passed through a carbon filament in an evacuated glass bulb, heating the filament to incandescence.<\/p>\n
In 1897, an English physicist, Joseph John Thomson, discovered the electron with its negative charge. In the next scene in this drama, details of Thomson’s discovery reached John Ambrose Fleming, formerly an assistant to Edison who, by the late 1890’s, had become a professor of Electrical Engineering at University College<\/a>, London.<\/p>\n
Based on his analysis of Edison’s work, and the knowledge of Thomson’s discovery, Fleming invented the vacuum tube diode<\/a>, wherein the carbon filament was surrounded by a positively charged cylindrical metal plate electrode.<\/p>\n
When the filament was heated to incandescence electrons were emitted and traveled through the vacuum to the metal electrode only if it was positively charged. This meant that Fleming’s vacuum tube diode could convert alternating current to direct current thus serving as a rectifier<\/a> for the electronic devices yet to come.<\/p>\n
The final episode in this saga was the contribution of an American inventor, Lee Deforest<\/a>. Building on the work of Edison, Thomson, and Fleming, he added a metal grid of fine wire between the filament and plate of a Fleming diode to form a vacuum tube triode<\/a>.<\/p>\n
With this episode the Electronics Age began.<\/p>\n\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"