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voltage spawning a cathode ray

 
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Jun16-12, 04:09 PM   #1
 

voltage spawning a cathode ray


In descriptions of the cathode ray, various sites mention how the ray is formed from a voltage applied to the tube which spawns the ray on sees in the vacuum tube. Could someone elaborate on how a voltage can spawn this beam? As in, where does the potential difference come from and so on.

Thank you
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Jun16-12, 06:08 PM   #2
 
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A "cathode ray" is simply an electron that has been emitted from the cathode and accelerated by the negative voltage applied. (Or a positive voltage from an anode) The electrons can be emitted through "thermionic emission" by heating the cathode, or a "cold cathode" can be used in which a very high voltage ionizes the remaining gas inside an evacuated vacuum tube.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cathode_ray
Jun18-12, 11:56 AM   #3
 
Thank you!
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cathode ray, potential difference, voltage
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