DocumentCode :
1331527
Title :
The Edison effect and its modern applications
Author :
Sharp, Clayton H.
Author_Institution :
Electrical Testing Laboratories, New York, N. Y.
Volume :
41
Issue :
1
fYear :
1922
Firstpage :
68
Lastpage :
78
Abstract :
WE are so accustomed to thinking of Thomas A. Edison as the father of the incandescent lamp and of the electric lighting industry that we sometimes forget that his first achievements were in the field of the electrical communication of intelligence, and that in this field he is no less distinguished. To say nothing of his inventions in multiplex and automatic telegraphy, it is well to recall that the field of telephony owes no less to the fundamental inventions of Mr. Edison than to those of Alexander Graham Bell. Bell, it is true, invented the telephone receiver of today, but Edison invented the transmitter, and afterwards invented a highly efficient receiver on a principle entirely different from that of Dr. Bell´s.
Keywords :
Batteries; Conductors; Electron tubes; Electrostatics; Oscillators; Wireless communication; Wires;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Journal of the
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0360-6449
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JoAIEE.1922.6594383
Filename :
6594383
Link To Document :
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