MediaHistory: on the History of Electricity

It was well known from at least the antiquity that by rubbing certain materials electrical charge can be created, but for several centuries we did’t have any explanation of this strange phenomena. Systematic experiments with static electricity began not earlier than the 17th century, and became an important subject of entertainers – called electritians – by the 18th century.

Figure V and VI from Ottonis De Guericke Experimenta Nova (ut vocantur) Magdeburgica De Vacuo Spatio, Amstelodami: Janssonius, 1672, p. 148, showing Guericke’s experiments with the sulfur globe.
The great advances in experimenting with electricity came during the 1700s from increased ability to control it. Pictured here (Physico-Mechanical Experiments, 1702) is a device Hauksbee made with a hollow glass sphere that could be mechanically rubbed at high speed, producing larger and more stable charges.
In a famous episode, the German experimentalist Georg Richmann, working at the Russian court in St. Petersburg, was killed in 1753 while trying to capture the charge of lightning. This tragedy was widely illustrated in the contemporary press as a story of heroism in the pursuit of science.
This is one of Gray’s most famous experiments, in which he showed that a boy suspended by (insulating) silk cords could be charged (with the glass tube) and then as a (conducting) body could (electrostatically) attract small objects. Dramatic experiments such as these became quite well-known — this plate is in fact from a German
publication in 1744 describing Gray’s work.

Experiments by the silk-trader Stephen Gray spread the fashion of static electricity from the 1740s in Europe. Gray discovered that some materials conduct, while others insulate electric current. At that time electric flow was considered similar to the flow of water, with the exception that it was still impossible to store the misterious energy.

Pieter von Musschenbroek accidentally finds the way to store electrical charge; the Leyden Jar was capable to keep its charge for several days. Despite that conductors and insulators were already at that time, electric charge, electricity became firt transportable by carrying Leyden Jars.

Besides creating static electricity with friction machines, by 1746 experimentalists learned how to capture and store it. The “Leyden jar” was named for the Dutch university where the professor Pieter von Musschenbroek (1692-1761) refined the device. It was a condensor that let one store charge in the water (or conducting foil) in a bottle and then
discharge a powerful spark.
Benjamin West: Benjamin Franklin Drawing Electricity from the Sky, cca. 1816

Pieter von Musschenbroek accidentally finds the way to store electrical charge; the Leyden Jar was capable to keep its charge for several days. Despite that conductors and insulators were already at that time, electric charge, electricity became firt transportable by carrying Leyden Jars.

The American Benjamin Franklin proved that thunderbolts are electrical phenomena, thus linking electricity with light. During his experiments with the Leyden jar he discovered the difference between negative and positive charge. He imagined that every conducting body was surrounded by an invisible electric fluid; on the side of positive charge too much electrical fluid is present, while at the negative pole there is a lack of this fluid. And that nature endeavors to balance always (as does the ideal american economy), the two poles attract each other. This is the explanation to why the Leiden bottle is only charged with electricity when you keep it in your hands, which serves as a conductor: the positive charge of the human hand attracts the negative charge, from which the glass of the jar insulates it. This charging negative strain(voltage) cause the electric shock if we touch the conduit on the top of the jar. Contemporary condensators, which is a component of almost every electrical appliance, work exactly the same way, they are the modern miniature versions of the Leyden jar.

Male and female Torpedo. From John Walsh, “Of the Electric Property of the Torpedo,”
Philosophical Transactions 63 (1773): 480.

With the introduction of the torpedo fish in England a new type of electricity (fundamentally different from static electricity) was discovered. Henry Cavendish aimed to reproduce the amazingly strong electric shock produced by the torpedo fish, and discovers the difference between voltage(electric tension) and amperage (the intensity of electric current).

Cross-section of the Torpedo (displaying electrical organs). From John Hunter, “Anatomical Observations on the Torpedo,” Philosophical Transactions 63 (1773): 489.

The fact that living organisms can produce electricity opened a new chapter in investigating the mysterious phenomena. Is this the same electricity what can be produced artificially, which is similar to God’s whip, to the thunderbolt?

By the end of the century, there were also tantalizing experimental suggestions that electricity might be the force of life, a Newtonian entity that would explain “animal spirits”. Deeply influential were the experimental results of the anatomist Luigi Galvani (1737-98), who reported in 1791 his startling work on the effects of electricity on muscle.

In Italy two scientists competed with each other from the distance of 150km, in Bologna and Pavia; the studies of Galvani and Volta were the next important milestones of the history of electricity. Galvani’s approach came from anatomy/autopsy, he concentrated on electrical shocking of dead or paralyzed tissues. He was convinced that living organisms are filled with a completely different kind of electricity from the artificially produceable one, that was planted into every living creature by God.

Among the inspirations for Mary Shelley’s gothic classic ‘Frankenstein’ from 1818 were the (in)famous experiments carried out in public by the physicist Giovanni Aldini (1762-1834) at the Royal College of Surgeons in 1803.

“In January 1803, the body of the murderer George Forster was pulled from the gallows of Newgate Prison in London and taken to the Royal College of Surgeons. There, before an audience of doctors and curiosity-seekers, Giovanni Aldini, nephew of the late Luigi Galvani, prepared to return the corpse to life.

At least, that is what some of the spectators thought they were witnessing. When Aldini applied conducting rods, connected to a large battery, to Forster’s face, “the jaw began to quiver, the adjoining muscles were horribly contorted, and the left eye actually opened”. The climax of the performance came as Aldini probed Forster’s rectum, causing his clenched fist to punch the air, as if in fury, his legs to kick and his back to arch violently.”

As Volta invented his famous piles, it became possible to examine the phenomenon of electrolysis. The continuous electrical current led to the disintegration of water molecules, caused hydrogen and oxygen precipitation from the water. This started a new chapter in all natural sciences, both in chemistry where new chemical elements could be discovered, but even in physics.

The following step was the discovery of the relationship between electricity and the magnetic field. In 1820 the Danish Hans Christian Ørsted discovers that the electric flow in wires hijacks the compass. Based on Ørsted’s discovery Faraday proves the existence of electromagnetic field and electromagnetic induction.

Faraday essentially created the first electric motor, and the first practical device producing electricity, the Faraday wheel: this homopolar generator was capable to develop electrical current from rotating movement in a magnetic field.

The Faraday disk was the first electric generator (1831). The horseshoe-shaped magnet (A) created a magnetic field through the disk (D). When the disk was turned, this induced an electric current radially outward from the center toward the rim. The current flowed out through the sliding spring contact m, through the external circuit, and back into the center of the disk through the axle.

The coiled electromagnets created by William Sturgeon and Joseph Henry have paved the way for the creation of the first telecommunication medium, the telegraph.

Following the invention of the light bulb, Edison started to set up an electrical network in Manhattan. The direct current (DC), however, can not be transmitted economically over long distances, so the alternating current (AC, invented by Tesla) networks, based on transformators was the real breakthrough.

Edison’s lab in Menlo Park.

Maxwell described mathematically the operation of the electric field, what Heinrich Hertz and Oliver Lodge proved by demonstrative practical experiments, besides laying the foundations of the practical use of electromagnetic (radio) waves. Following Lodge, Jagadish Chandra Bose creates the first telegraph which was stolen by Marconi, who patents it and makes money from it. But Bose discovers the advantages of using semiconductor crystals for the detection of radio waves, so practically invents the radio-receiver.

The ancestors of “neon-tubes”, the first vacuum tubes filled with different gases were produced by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Geissler (1815-1879) from the 1850s. These early cathode-ray tubes were called Geissler-tubes. In these spectacular tubes the contained gases were glowing in various colors as electric current was conducted through them. (Today’s fluorescent tubes and lightbulbs work pretty the same way – it is rather surprising that they were invented decades before Edison’s light bulb.)

Sir William Crookes (1832-1919) was able to produce even more perfect wacuum in glass tubes by inventing a pump in 1879, which more efficiently blew out air from them.
The Railway tube (Crookes nr 11)
Demonstrates kinetic energy.  The electrons bounced at  the paddles covered  with a small amount of phosphor will turn  the paddlewheel and move from one to the other side of the tube. In fact it is the heat which is present when the electrons strike the vanes that turns the peddle wheel similar as the Radiometer. Several scientists like Maxwell and Puluj stated this although Crookes was convinced of the electron force theory. Eventually it was Thomson who proved (1903) that the electron force in the tube necessary to move the wheel was insufficient.
The Maltese Cross tube (Crookes nr 9)
This is one of the most famous Crookes tubes. The tube demonstrates that electrons go in a straight line and don’t go through metal. The cross can actually lay down and stand up (mechanically). When the cross lies  down, the glass face of the tube emits a green glow when the electrons strike the glass wall, when it’s right up you will see the shadow of the cross. After a while due to fatigue of the glass the glow is less strong, when the cross is tipped over at that time, the previous unexposed glass glows brighter than the surrounding glass.
Photo of experimenters taking an X-ray with an early Crookes tube apparatus, from the late 1800s. The Crookes x-ray tube is visible suspended at center. The upper man is examining the bones of his hand with a fluoroscope screen. The lower man is taking a radiograph of his hand with a photographic plate. The power source is an induction coil, seen at left, and the mechanism immediately to its right against the wall is a motor-operated ‘break wheel’ interrupter in the coil’s primary circuit. The large flat disk on the table is a rheostat (adjustable resistor) power control to adjust the primary current to the coil. Several spare Crookes X-ray tubes are seen in a rack on the wall. No precautions against radiation exposure are taken; its hazards were not known at the time.
The Braun tube, this small early 1900 tube is in fact a cold Cathode Crookes tube with an internal mica screen covered with phosphorescent paint. The neck contains a glass diaphragm with a small 2mm hole to let only a tiny electron beam go through  (focus) which can be deflected by an (electro) magnet to produce a spot on the screen. 
Wehnelt CRT after Thomson ca 1930
This nice tube is the first demonstration CRT with a direct heated filament cathode and a Wehnelt cylinder for focussing the electron beam.This tube, probably imported from E Leybolds Nachfolger and sold by W Edwards and co London. Special is the fact that this tube has four static deflection plates. 
This from origin cold cathode Braun tube is equipped with two deflection plates to bent the beam electrostatically instead of magnetically as with the Braun tube. This tube became forerunner of the static CRT used in measuring equipment like the oscilloscope. The neck contains an aluminum diaphragm to form the beam.

Transistors, How do they work ?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ukDKVHnac4

Hogyan készült? Az audio vákuumcsövek