T
Tom Del Rosso
Guest
From
http://www.stephenwolfram.com/about-sw/interviews/85-sciam/
near the end.
Back in 1948 Robert Heppe of Fairfax, Va., was a freshman electrical
engineer at the Queens, N.Y., plant of the Sylvania Electric Products
Company. Heppe, assigned to assist in the design of vacuum tubes, found the
process onerous. The problem was that one had to specify the size, shape and
placement of the grids and beam-forming plates on paper. The design was then
manufactured in the form of a single tube and tested. This could take
several days. His supervisor, Gerald Rich, improved efficiency by suggesting
a certain analog gadget.
The gadget consisted of a rubber sheet, a dowel, some plywood and several
boxes of toothpicks. The rubber sheet clamped into a large ring represented
the tube cross section magnified many times. The cathode was a wood dowel
poking up in the center of the sheet. Arrays of toothpicks represented
various grid designs. Negative grids tented the sheet up from below;
positive grids depressed the sheet from above. Other aspects of tube
geometry were captured by plywood shapes also imposed from below or above.
Electrons pouring from the cathode were simulated by slowly emptying a can
of BB's over the dowel. "It can be shown," writes Heppe, "that the slope of
the rubber in such a gadget represents the electric field, and the height
represents the voltage in the space between the electrodes.... The BB's
rolled down the sheet [as in] a pin-ball game, some collecting at the plate,
some at the positive grids. If we didn't like how many arrived at the
various electrodes, or which way they went, we could move things around,
change sizes, etc., and try it again." Promising configurations were
embodied and tested in real tubes.
--
Reply in group, but if emailing add
2 more zeros and remove the obvious.
http://www.stephenwolfram.com/about-sw/interviews/85-sciam/
near the end.
Back in 1948 Robert Heppe of Fairfax, Va., was a freshman electrical
engineer at the Queens, N.Y., plant of the Sylvania Electric Products
Company. Heppe, assigned to assist in the design of vacuum tubes, found the
process onerous. The problem was that one had to specify the size, shape and
placement of the grids and beam-forming plates on paper. The design was then
manufactured in the form of a single tube and tested. This could take
several days. His supervisor, Gerald Rich, improved efficiency by suggesting
a certain analog gadget.
The gadget consisted of a rubber sheet, a dowel, some plywood and several
boxes of toothpicks. The rubber sheet clamped into a large ring represented
the tube cross section magnified many times. The cathode was a wood dowel
poking up in the center of the sheet. Arrays of toothpicks represented
various grid designs. Negative grids tented the sheet up from below;
positive grids depressed the sheet from above. Other aspects of tube
geometry were captured by plywood shapes also imposed from below or above.
Electrons pouring from the cathode were simulated by slowly emptying a can
of BB's over the dowel. "It can be shown," writes Heppe, "that the slope of
the rubber in such a gadget represents the electric field, and the height
represents the voltage in the space between the electrodes.... The BB's
rolled down the sheet [as in] a pin-ball game, some collecting at the plate,
some at the positive grids. If we didn't like how many arrived at the
various electrodes, or which way they went, we could move things around,
change sizes, etc., and try it again." Promising configurations were
embodied and tested in real tubes.
--
Reply in group, but if emailing add
2 more zeros and remove the obvious.