DocumentCode :
2900074
Title :
Vacuum electronics in India
Author :
Kumar, Lalit
Author_Institution :
Microwave Tube R&D Centre, Defence R&D Organ., Bangalore, India
fYear :
2011
fDate :
21-24 Feb. 2011
Firstpage :
7
Lastpage :
10
Abstract :
The vacuum electronic era started with the invention of vacuum diode by JA Fleming in 1904. However, the foundation of microwaves was laid in India much earlier by one of the fathers of radio science Acharya Jagdish Chandra Bose in 1890´s in Calcutta. He used waveguides, horn antenna, dielectric lenses, polarizer´s and even semiconductor detector, while working at the 2.5 cm to 5 mm wavelength. Today, the vacuum electronic devices (VEDs) are an essential component of many defense, space, and high energy research and civilian systems employing rf, microwaves, or x-rays or simply high speed switching. Defense systems like Radar, electronic warfare, communication and missile systems; high energy particle accelerators, TeV colliders, fusion reactors, industrial and domestic-ovens, medical imaging, hyperthermia, high power electric transmission etc. all require VEDs. Presently, India is one among just a dozen countries in the world having the ecosystem of academia, research laboratories production enterprises and a significant domestic market in defense, space, civilian, high energy research and ISM sectors to nurture innovation in these devices.
Keywords :
vacuum microelectronics; India; VED; research laboratories production enterprise; vacuum diode; vacuum electronic device; Electromagnetic heating; Klystrons; Magnetic resonance; Microwave communication; Solid modeling;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Vacuum Electronics Conference (IVEC), 2011 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Bangalore
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8662-5
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IVEC.2011.5746850
Filename :
5746850
Link To Document :
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