US2395299A - Electron discharge apparatus - Google Patents

Electron discharge apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2395299A
US2395299A US542665A US54266544A US2395299A US 2395299 A US2395299 A US 2395299A US 542665 A US542665 A US 542665A US 54266544 A US54266544 A US 54266544A US 2395299 A US2395299 A US 2395299A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
anode
cathode
magnetic
anodes
coil
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US542665A
Inventor
Albert M Skellett
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
AT&T Corp
Original Assignee
Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB2996439A external-priority patent/GB533674A/en
Application filed by Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc filed Critical Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
Priority to US542665A priority Critical patent/US2395299A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2395299A publication Critical patent/US2395299A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65DCONTAINERS FOR STORAGE OR TRANSPORT OF ARTICLES OR MATERIALS, e.g. BAGS, BARRELS, BOTTLES, BOXES, CANS, CARTONS, CRATES, DRUMS, JARS, TANKS, HOPPERS, FORWARDING CONTAINERS; ACCESSORIES, CLOSURES, OR FITTINGS THEREFOR; PACKAGING ELEMENTS; PACKAGES
    • B65D9/00Containers having bodies formed by interconnecting or uniting two or more rigid, or substantially rigid, components made wholly or mainly of wood or substitutes therefor
    • B65D9/12Containers having bodies formed by interconnecting or uniting two or more rigid, or substantially rigid, components made wholly or mainly of wood or substitutes therefor collapsible, e.g. with all parts detachable
    • B65D9/18Containers having bodies formed by interconnecting or uniting two or more rigid, or substantially rigid, components made wholly or mainly of wood or substitutes therefor collapsible, e.g. with all parts detachable with some parts detachable and other parts hinged together
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J31/00Cathode ray tubes; Electron beam tubes
    • H01J31/02Cathode ray tubes; Electron beam tubes having one or more output electrodes which may be impacted selectively by the ray or beam, and onto, from, or over which the ray or beam may be deflected or de-focused
    • H01J31/06Cathode ray tubes; Electron beam tubes having one or more output electrodes which may be impacted selectively by the ray or beam, and onto, from, or over which the ray or beam may be deflected or de-focused with more than two output electrodes, e.g. for multiple switching or counting

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electron discharge apparatus and more particularly to such apparatus including an electron discharge device of the muitlanode beam type.
  • One object of this invention is to enable selective magnetic deflection of an electron beam in a multianode electron discharge device. in accordance with signal pulses such that the beam will be held focussed upon any desired anode after the cessation of the signal pulse resulting in direction of the beam to such anode.
  • auxiliary magnetic iield in the anode-cathode region, at an angle, for example substantially a right angle, to the constant eld and of an intensity dependent upon the amplitude of the beam deflection due to the eld pulses such that the beam is held focussed upon the anode to which it is deected.
  • the auxiliary held-producing means comprises a coil having its longitudinal axis normal to the direction of the constant eld and connected in circuit with the cathode and the several anodes in such manner that the amplitude of the magnetic field due thereto when the beam is impinging upon any anode is such as to maintain the beam directed upon that anode.
  • the electron discharge device therein illustrated comprises an evacuated enclosing vessel I in which there are mounted a cathode Il, a control or accelerating electrode or grid I2 encompassing the cathode, a plurality of trough-shaped anodes, I3a to
  • the several electrodes advantageously are parallel and elongated in the direction normal to the plane of the drawing, so that when the electrodes are energized as described hereinafter an electron beam, indicated in one position at I6. of rectangular section and high current is produced.
  • a magnet having pole-pieces I1 is mounted outside the vessel I0 to produce a field of prescribed intensity substantially parallel to a line from the cathode II to the anode I3e.
  • a pair of eld coils I8a and I8b are mounted in alignment on opposite sides of the vessel I0, for example on a magnetic yoke 30, and as pointed out hereinafter, produce in the region between the cathode and the anodes a magnetic iield substantially normal to the i'leld due to the magnet and of an intensity dependent upon the position of the beam.
  • An auxiliary or pulsing coil I9 coaxial with the coils I8 is provided on the yoke 30 to produce field pulses also normal to the field due to the magnet.
  • Each of the anodes I3 is connected to a respective tap on one of the coils I8 and thence to the positive terminal of one of the sources 3i, such as batteries, the negative terminal of each source being connected to the cathode by way of ground as shown.
  • Loads 22, such as relays, may be connected in circuit with the anodes.
  • the screen electrode I4 is connected to an intermediate positive terminal of one of the sources.
  • the electrode or grid I2 may be held at a fixed potential, positive or negative, with respect to the cathode II or may have a. variable potential applied thereto by way of a suitable input element 20.
  • the auxiliary coil I9 is adapted to be energized from a suitable pulsing circuit 2
  • the constant field due to the magnet is made such that in the absence of fields due to the coils I8 and I9, the electrons emanating from the cathode II are concentrated into a beam focussed upon the anode I3e. If the coil I9 is energized, the electrons emanating from the cathode are subjected to two magnetic fields at right angles to each other and, consequently, the beam will be deflected so that it is substantially parallel to the resultant of the two magnetic elds. The direction and amplitude of the beam deection will be dependent, of course, upon the polarity and magnitude of the field due to the coil I9.
  • the coil I9 is energized by a pulse such that the electron beam ls shifted from the anode lieto the anode IU. Then, as is apparent, a circuit will be completed from the anode I3! tothe cathode Il through the source 3th and a part of the coil
  • a second energizing pulse of proper amplitude and polarityis supplied to the coil i9 the beam will be deected to terminate upon the anode
  • the field due to the coil Ib is of the proper intensityA the beam will be held upon the anode i3g.
  • the beam may be shifted successively from one anode to the next by pulses supplied to the coil I9 and held upon any anode to which it is deflected by virtue of the :Held due to the coil I8, this eld being of an intensity at any time determined by the position of the beam at that time, i. e.. by which of the anodes the beam is impinging upon.
  • the beam when the beam is impinging upon any anode, it automatically adjusts the eld normal to the constant ileld to the value requisite to hold the beam upon that anode.
  • the polarity of the field due to the coil i9 has been assumed such as to produce clockwise deilection of the electron beam. 0i' course, if the polarity is reversed, the beam will be deiiected in the opposite, i. e., counter-clockwise, direction. Hence, the beam may be shifted from one anode to another anode upon either side of it by applywith claim 1 wherein said deflecting means comprises magnetic means for producingmagnetic gels pulses at an angle to said iii-st magnetic 3.
  • said means for producing said second magnetic field comprises a magnetic ileld coil connected in circuit with said source and all of said electron receiving electrodes.
  • Electron discharge apparatus comprising means including a cathode for producing an electron beam, a plurality of anodes mounted side by side opposite said cathode, means for establishing a constant magnetic field having its lines passing from said cathode to one of said anodes and of such intensity as to focus said beam upon said one anode, means for deflecting said beam to shift its terminus from said one anode to another of said anodes. and means for holding said beam upon the anode to which it is shifted.
  • said holding means comprising means for producing a magnetic ileld substanitally normal to said constant iield and of intensity proportional to the amplitude of deiiection of said beam when its terminus is shifted from said one anode to another anode.
  • Electron discharge apparatus comprising means including a cathode for producing an electron beam, a plurality of anodes mounted opposite said cathode, means for deecting said beam to deect it selectively against any one of said anodes, and means separate from said deecting means for holding said beam upon the anode against which it is directed, said holding means comprising means for producing a magnetic field in the direction of deflection of said beam and of an intensity dependent upon which anode said beam is directed against.
  • Electron discharge apparatus comprising a cathode, a plurality of anodes mounted side by side opposite said cathode, means for producing a magnetic field having its lines extending ing an energizing pulse of appropriate polarity and amplitude to the coil I9.
  • the several magnetic field-producing elements are oriented so that the electron beam initially is directed upon the center anode and is deflected to one side or the other of this anode. It will be apparent that thefield-producing elements may be oriented so that initially the beam is impinging upon any other anode, for example, either end anode
  • Electron discharge apparatus comprising a source of electrons, a plurality of electron receiving electrodes mounted side by side opposite said source, means for producing a magnetic field to concentrate electrons emanating from said source into a beam, means for deflecting said beam selectively to direct it against any one of said electron receiving electrodes, and means for holding said beam upon the electrode against which it is directed by said deflecting means, said holding means comprising means for producing a second magnetic ield at an angle to said rst magnetic eld and of an intensity proportional to the amplitude of deection of said beam.
  • neutron disarge apparatus in accordance from said cathode to one of said anodes to concentrate electrons emanating' from said cathode into a beam focussed upon said one anode, means for deilecting ⁇ said beam to shift its terminus from said one anode to another anode, said deflecting means comprising means for producing magnetic field pulses normal to said first neld and of an intensity to deect said beam from one anode to the next adjacent anode.
  • Electron discharge apparatus comprising a cathode, a pair of anodes, means for producing a magnetic iield having its lines extending from said cathode to one of said anodes to concentrate electrons emanating from said cathode into a beam focussed on said one anode, means for deilecting said beam to cause it to impinge upon the other of said anodes, and magnetic eld coil means connected between said cathode and said other anode and energized in accordance with current ow therebetween for producing a second magnetic eld substantially normal to said iirst eld and of intensity to hold said beam upon said other anode upon cessation of operation of said deiiecting means.

Description

Feb. 19, 1946. A. M. SKELLETT 2,395,299
ELECTRON DISCHARGE APPARATUS Filed June 29, 1944 A T TORNEV Patented Feb. 19, 1946 ELECTRON DISCHARGE APPARATUS Albert M. Skellett, Madison, N. J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Application June 29, 1944, serial No. 542,665
(ci. 25o- 157) 7 Claims,
This invention relates to electron discharge apparatus and more particularly to such apparatus including an electron discharge device of the muitlanode beam type.
One object of this invention is to enable selective magnetic deflection of an electron beam in a multianode electron discharge device. in accordance with signal pulses such that the beam will be held focussed upon any desired anode after the cessation of the signal pulse resulting in direction of the beam to such anode.
In one illustrative embodiment of this invention, electron discharge apparatus especially suitable for step-by-step switching operation comprises a cathode, a plurality of anodes mounted side by side opposite the cathode, means for producing a constant magnetic iield in the anodecathode region for normally directing the electron beam in a prescribed direction, for example, for normally focussing it upon one of the anodes, and means for producing magnetic eld pulses at an angle, for example substantially a right angle, to the constant ileld, to deflect the beam in one direction or the other, dependent upon the polarity of the pulses, so that it impinges upon any desired one of the anodes.
In accordance with one feature of this invention, means are provided for producing an auxiliary magnetic iield in the anode-cathode region, at an angle, for example substantially a right angle, to the constant eld and of an intensity dependent upon the amplitude of the beam deflection due to the eld pulses such that the beam is held focussed upon the anode to which it is deected. In one illustrative embodiment, the auxiliary held-producing means comprises a coil having its longitudinal axis normal to the direction of the constant eld and connected in circuit with the cathode and the several anodes in such manner that the amplitude of the magnetic field due thereto when the beam is impinging upon any anode is such as to maintain the beam directed upon that anode.
The invention and the above-noted and other features thereof will -be understood more clearly and fully from the following detailed description with reference to the accompanying drawing in which the single gure is in part a circuit diagram and in part a sectional view of an electron discharge device, showing an electronic switching system illustrative of one embodiment of this invention.
Referring now to the drawing, the electron discharge device therein illustrated comprises an evacuated enclosing vessel I in which there are mounted a cathode Il, a control or accelerating electrode or grid I2 encompassing the cathode, a plurality of trough-shaped anodes, I3a to |31', mounted side by side along an arc concentric with the cathode, and an arcuate screen electrode I4 having therein a plurality of apertures I5 each opposite a respective anode. The several electrodes advantageously are parallel and elongated in the direction normal to the plane of the drawing, so that when the electrodes are energized as described hereinafter an electron beam, indicated in one position at I6. of rectangular section and high current is produced.
A magnet having pole-pieces I1 is mounted outside the vessel I0 to produce a field of prescribed intensity substantially parallel to a line from the cathode II to the anode I3e. A pair of eld coils I8a and I8b are mounted in alignment on opposite sides of the vessel I0, for example on a magnetic yoke 30, and as pointed out hereinafter, produce in the region between the cathode and the anodes a magnetic iield substantially normal to the i'leld due to the magnet and of an intensity dependent upon the position of the beam. An auxiliary or pulsing coil I9 coaxial with the coils I8 is provided on the yoke 30 to produce field pulses also normal to the field due to the magnet.
Each of the anodes I3 is connected to a respective tap on one of the coils I8 and thence to the positive terminal of one of the sources 3i, such as batteries, the negative terminal of each source being connected to the cathode by way of ground as shown. Loads 22, such as relays, may be connected in circuit with the anodes. The screen electrode I4 is connected to an intermediate positive terminal of one of the sources. The electrode or grid I2 may be held at a fixed potential, positive or negative, with respect to the cathode II or may have a. variable potential applied thereto by way of a suitable input element 20. The auxiliary coil I9 is adapted to be energized from a suitable pulsing circuit 2|.
The constant field due to the magnet is made such that in the absence of fields due to the coils I8 and I9, the electrons emanating from the cathode II are concentrated into a beam focussed upon the anode I3e. If the coil I9 is energized, the electrons emanating from the cathode are subjected to two magnetic fields at right angles to each other and, consequently, the beam will be deflected so that it is substantially parallel to the resultant of the two magnetic elds. The direction and amplitude of the beam deection will be dependent, of course, upon the polarity and magnitude of the field due to the coil I9. Assume that the coil I9 is energized by a pulse such that the electron beam ls shifted from the anode lieto the anode IU. Then, as is apparent, a circuit will be completed from the anode I3! tothe cathode Il through the source 3th and a part of the coil |8b so that a magnetic eld, due to the coil l8b. normal to the constant field, is introduced into the anodecathode region. If the eld due to the coil I8b is of the proper intensity, it will be seen that the beam will be held upon the anode I3f. If, now, a second energizing pulse of proper amplitude and polarityis supplied to the coil i9, the beam will be deected to terminate upon the anode |39 so that a circuit, including a greater number of turns of the coil |8b, is completed between the anode I3g and the cathode and a field of intensity proportional to the number of turns included in the circuit is produced in the anodecathode region, the eld being normal to the constant field. As is apparent, if the field due to the coil Ib is of the proper intensityA the beam will be held upon the anode i3g.
Thus, it will be appreciated that the beam may be shifted successively from one anode to the next by pulses supplied to the coil I9 and held upon any anode to which it is deflected by virtue of the :Held due to the coil I8, this eld being of an intensity at any time determined by the position of the beam at that time, i. e.. by which of the anodes the beam is impinging upon. Stated in another way, when the beam is impinging upon any anode, it automatically adjusts the eld normal to the constant ileld to the value requisite to hold the beam upon that anode.
In the illustrative cases considered above, the polarity of the field due to the coil i9 has been assumed such as to produce clockwise deilection of the electron beam. 0i' course, if the polarity is reversed, the beam will be deiiected in the opposite, i. e., counter-clockwise, direction. Hence, the beam may be shifted from one anode to another anode upon either side of it by applywith claim 1 wherein said deflecting means comprises magnetic means for producingmagnetic gels pulses at an angle to said iii-st magnetic 3. Electron discharge apparatus in accordance with claim l wherein said means for producing said second magnetic field comprises a magnetic ileld coil connected in circuit with said source and all of said electron receiving electrodes.
4. Electron discharge apparatus comprising means including a cathode for producing an electron beam, a plurality of anodes mounted side by side opposite said cathode, means for establishing a constant magnetic field having its lines passing from said cathode to one of said anodes and of such intensity as to focus said beam upon said one anode, means for deflecting said beam to shift its terminus from said one anode to another of said anodes. and means for holding said beam upon the anode to which it is shifted. said holding means comprising means for producing a magnetic ileld substanitally normal to said constant iield and of intensity proportional to the amplitude of deiiection of said beam when its terminus is shifted from said one anode to another anode.
5. Electron discharge apparatus comprising means including a cathode for producing an electron beam, a plurality of anodes mounted opposite said cathode, means for deecting said beam to deect it selectively against any one of said anodes, and means separate from said deecting means for holding said beam upon the anode against which it is directed, said holding means comprising means for producing a magnetic field in the direction of deflection of said beam and of an intensity dependent upon which anode said beam is directed against.
6. Electron discharge apparatus comprising a cathode, a plurality of anodes mounted side by side opposite said cathode, means for producing a magnetic field having its lines extending ing an energizing pulse of appropriate polarity and amplitude to the coil I9.
In the specic embodiment of the invention illustrated and above described, the several magnetic field-producing elements are oriented so that the electron beam initially is directed upon the center anode and is deflected to one side or the other of this anode. It will be apparent that thefield-producing elements may be oriented so that initially the beam is impinging upon any other anode, for example, either end anode |3a or |31'. It will be understood also that various modications may be made in the embodiment illustrated and described without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as deiined in the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. Electron discharge apparatus comprising a source of electrons, a plurality of electron receiving electrodes mounted side by side opposite said source, means for producing a magnetic field to concentrate electrons emanating from said source into a beam, means for deflecting said beam selectively to direct it against any one of said electron receiving electrodes, and means for holding said beam upon the electrode against which it is directed by said deflecting means, said holding means comprising means for producing a second magnetic ield at an angle to said rst magnetic eld and of an intensity proportional to the amplitude of deection of said beam.
2. neutron disarge apparatus in accordance from said cathode to one of said anodes to concentrate electrons emanating' from said cathode into a beam focussed upon said one anode, means for deilecting` said beam to shift its terminus from said one anode to another anode, said deflecting means comprising means for producing magnetic field pulses normal to said first neld and of an intensity to deect said beam from one anode to the next adjacent anode. andV means for producing a second magnetic eld parallel to said pulses and of an intensity at any time substantially proportional to the amplitude of deilection of said beam from said one anode, said last-mentioned means comprising a magnetic eld coil connected to said cathode and all of said anodes.
7. Electron discharge apparatus comprising a cathode, a pair of anodes, means for producing a magnetic iield having its lines extending from said cathode to one of said anodes to concentrate electrons emanating from said cathode into a beam focussed on said one anode, means for deilecting said beam to cause it to impinge upon the other of said anodes, and magnetic eld coil means connected between said cathode and said other anode and energized in accordance with current ow therebetween for producing a second magnetic eld substantially normal to said iirst eld and of intensity to hold said beam upon said other anode upon cessation of operation of said deiiecting means.
ALBERT M. SKELLETI'.
US542665A 1939-11-13 1944-06-29 Electron discharge apparatus Expired - Lifetime US2395299A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US542665A US2395299A (en) 1939-11-13 1944-06-29 Electron discharge apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB2996439A GB533674A (en) 1939-11-13 1939-11-13 Improvements in collapsible boxes, cases, crates and the like
US542665A US2395299A (en) 1939-11-13 1944-06-29 Electron discharge apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2395299A true US2395299A (en) 1946-02-19

Family

ID=26260181

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US542665A Expired - Lifetime US2395299A (en) 1939-11-13 1944-06-29 Electron discharge apparatus

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2395299A (en)

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2477008A (en) * 1945-08-01 1949-07-26 Rosen Leo Electrical apparatus
US2522055A (en) * 1945-12-31 1950-09-12 Gen Railway Signal Co Electronic translating device
US2522291A (en) * 1945-09-20 1950-09-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Cathode-ray tube with target controlled deflecting plates
US2551024A (en) * 1946-12-20 1951-05-01 Gen Electric Co Ltd Multiplex arrangement for generating time-modulated pulses
US2556166A (en) * 1939-02-27 1951-06-12 Int Standard Electric Corp Electron switch, structures, and circuits
US2561057A (en) * 1946-10-23 1951-07-17 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Circuit arrangement comprising a cathode beam tube provided with means for deflecting the cathode beam
US2563807A (en) * 1945-03-07 1951-08-14 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Electron discharge apparatus circuit
US2564908A (en) * 1949-03-08 1951-08-21 Nat Union Radio Corp Voltage sampling and electron beam holding arrangement
US2616060A (en) * 1948-07-03 1952-10-28 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Cathode-ray coding tube
US2616978A (en) * 1948-04-20 1952-11-04 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Cathode-ray type selector switch circuit
US2645741A (en) * 1948-03-29 1953-07-14 Westervelt Robert Alanson Electronic scanning apparatus
US2652514A (en) * 1949-09-14 1953-09-15 Automatic Telephone & Elect Display arrangement
US2670405A (en) * 1948-06-10 1954-02-23 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Signaling system employing electron beams
US2704328A (en) * 1950-11-03 1955-03-15 Nat Union Radio Corp Electron-beam tube oscillator
US2704336A (en) * 1951-01-03 1955-03-15 Kazan Benjamin Pulse counting tube
US2706248A (en) * 1949-02-12 1955-04-12 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Systems for magnetic and electric electron flow control
US2721955A (en) * 1953-07-24 1955-10-25 Burroughs Corp Multi-position beam tube
US2781171A (en) * 1948-09-17 1957-02-12 Northrop Aircraft Inc Electronic counting tube
US2839702A (en) * 1953-07-24 1958-06-17 Burroughs Corp Modulated distribution system
US2896112A (en) * 1945-08-20 1959-07-21 Philip H Allen Cathode ray tube apparatus
US2909702A (en) * 1948-10-01 1959-10-20 Siemens Ag Discharge vessel cooled by radiation
US2942150A (en) * 1957-05-29 1960-06-21 Columbia Broadcasting Syst Inc Television picture display apparatus
US3153173A (en) * 1961-03-30 1964-10-13 Clarence J Carter Voltage sampling, amplifying, and combining cathode ray tube system

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2556166A (en) * 1939-02-27 1951-06-12 Int Standard Electric Corp Electron switch, structures, and circuits
US2563807A (en) * 1945-03-07 1951-08-14 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Electron discharge apparatus circuit
US2477008A (en) * 1945-08-01 1949-07-26 Rosen Leo Electrical apparatus
US2896112A (en) * 1945-08-20 1959-07-21 Philip H Allen Cathode ray tube apparatus
US2522291A (en) * 1945-09-20 1950-09-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Cathode-ray tube with target controlled deflecting plates
US2522055A (en) * 1945-12-31 1950-09-12 Gen Railway Signal Co Electronic translating device
US2561057A (en) * 1946-10-23 1951-07-17 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Circuit arrangement comprising a cathode beam tube provided with means for deflecting the cathode beam
US2551024A (en) * 1946-12-20 1951-05-01 Gen Electric Co Ltd Multiplex arrangement for generating time-modulated pulses
US2645741A (en) * 1948-03-29 1953-07-14 Westervelt Robert Alanson Electronic scanning apparatus
US2616978A (en) * 1948-04-20 1952-11-04 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Cathode-ray type selector switch circuit
US2670405A (en) * 1948-06-10 1954-02-23 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Signaling system employing electron beams
US2616060A (en) * 1948-07-03 1952-10-28 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Cathode-ray coding tube
US2781171A (en) * 1948-09-17 1957-02-12 Northrop Aircraft Inc Electronic counting tube
US2909702A (en) * 1948-10-01 1959-10-20 Siemens Ag Discharge vessel cooled by radiation
US2706248A (en) * 1949-02-12 1955-04-12 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Systems for magnetic and electric electron flow control
US2564908A (en) * 1949-03-08 1951-08-21 Nat Union Radio Corp Voltage sampling and electron beam holding arrangement
US2652514A (en) * 1949-09-14 1953-09-15 Automatic Telephone & Elect Display arrangement
US2704328A (en) * 1950-11-03 1955-03-15 Nat Union Radio Corp Electron-beam tube oscillator
US2704336A (en) * 1951-01-03 1955-03-15 Kazan Benjamin Pulse counting tube
US2721955A (en) * 1953-07-24 1955-10-25 Burroughs Corp Multi-position beam tube
US2839702A (en) * 1953-07-24 1958-06-17 Burroughs Corp Modulated distribution system
US2942150A (en) * 1957-05-29 1960-06-21 Columbia Broadcasting Syst Inc Television picture display apparatus
US3153173A (en) * 1961-03-30 1964-10-13 Clarence J Carter Voltage sampling, amplifying, and combining cathode ray tube system

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2395299A (en) Electron discharge apparatus
US2277516A (en) Method and apparatus for frequency changing
US2657378A (en) Pulse translation apparatus
US2214019A (en) Electronic switching device
US3331985A (en) Character generating system utilizing a cathode ray tube in which a portion of a plurality of electron beams are selectively defocussed to form the character
US2332881A (en) Cathode ray tube arrangement
US2459724A (en) Astatic cathode-ray tube
GB726823A (en) Improvements in or relating to magnetic circuits for travelling wave apparatus
US2479084A (en) Directed beam high-frequency oscillator
US2540835A (en) Cathode-ray device
US2580355A (en) Ion trap magnet
US2845571A (en) Electrostatically focused traveling wave tube
US2975325A (en) Electron beam deflection system
US2841741A (en) Multi-anode high speed switching tube
US2314409A (en) Magnetic coil structure
US2719242A (en) Beam alignment device for plural beam tubes
US2260546A (en) Means for controlling the deflection of cathode ray and like beams
US2728873A (en) Cathode ray control apparatus
US2266671A (en) Cathode ray tube multiplex telephony system
US2763804A (en) Cathode ray tube device
US2607903A (en) Distributor tube construction
DE1027804B (en) Electron gun with ion trap
US2721293A (en) Control circuit for color television display tubes
US2465342A (en) Electronic discharge device
US2907908A (en) Apparatus for preventing distortion in plural beam cathode ray tubes