![]() It also uses lethal high voltage, so DO NOT TOUCH THE ANODE! This tube is dissipating about 100 watts, so without the proper cooling, it will melt the seal and burn anyone who touches it. This experiment is fun, but do not run it too long. Thompson that proved the existence of the electron as a subatomic particle. In fact, this cathode ray tube is a reenactment of the experiment by J.J. Because magnetic fields affect charged particles, the fact that a magnet can effect the ray shows that whatever makes up the rays are negatively charged. You are actually proving that electrons exist and are negatively charged by moving these magnets. It is fun to play with this cathode ray tube with a magnet. You are actually able to touch electrons though a magnet! Something you were not able to previously touch is now touchable. Just hold the magnet near the tube, and the beam will deflect to either move toward the magnet, or away from it. You can then interact with ray using a hard drive magnet. The glow looks fantastic, like some otherworldly streetlight. Your cathode ray tube should now be working. Well, now that you know how a CRT works and is used today, lets build one! This is like a paintbrush painting hundreds of horizontal lines of with varying levels of blackness on a canvas. If you apply two different electronic signals to the electromagnets and varying power to the electron gun, you can create an image on the screen. The tube then has two electromagnets that are able to change the electron beam's direction in the X and Y axis'. #RESULTS OF CATHODE RAY EXPERIMENT TV#A TV CRT has an electron gun in the back that shoots a beam of electrons at a phosphor screen. These cathode rays are able to be used in televisions because they can be effected by magnetic fields. You can read more about his experiment at this website: It was this property of the cathode ray that let JJ Thompson discover and prove the existence of the electron as a subatomic unit of an atom in 1897. ![]() This allows them to be manipulated by a magnetic field. The reason that you can bend this ray with a magnet is because electrons are negative. This is why the beam has a blueish purple glow. Because it cannot stay at this high energy state for long, the atom releases this energy as light. When the electrons in the ray hit an oxygen atom, it moves to a higher energy state. Because the vacuum is not perfect, there will still be air molecules in the tube. If you remove most of the air in the chamber though, then the electrons are able to flow from one electrode to another. These electrons want to flow to the anode to equalize the voltage, but cannot because there are too many air molecules blocking their way. The cathode, because it has a negative high voltage with respect to the anode, will have a large amount of electrons on it. Now the reason this ray forms is because of the high voltage. If you draw a vacuum on the chamber and apply a high voltage to both ends, then a blueish purple glowing line forms. ![]() The simplest cathode ray tube is a sealed glass chamber that has electrodes at either end and a port to be able to draw a vacuum from. So many of you may be wondering now, how does a cathode ray tube work?Ī cathode ray tube consists of a ray going from the cathode to the anode, and it is made up of electrons. They are still used widely today as oscilloscope screens, but these cathode ray tubes as screens are a little bit more complicated than the simple cathode ray tube that we are going to be building in this instructable. These tubes have been used as television screens for all of the 20th century and for the early part of the 21st century. In fact, the first one was built in 1897 by scientist Ferdinand Braun. ![]() The video below compliments this instructable with a visual demonstration of this Cathode Ray Tube in action.ĬRT's have been around for a long time. #RESULTS OF CATHODE RAY EXPERIMENT HOW TO#This piece of test equipment that I will show you how to build can be used as an awesome scientific demonstration for any physics and chemistry class, or it can be used just as a way to confirm a long standing scientific principal. I'll explain how it proves this theory later in this instructable. This line not only looks cool, but it can be used to prove a scientific theory electrons are a subatomic unit with a negative charge. You can manipulate and bend this stream of electrons with a magnet. This is a stream of electrons that looks like a brilliant blue-purple line of plasma. When there is a vacuum drawn and a high voltage across the two electrodes, a cathode ray forms. A cathode ray tube, or CRT, is a glass tube with electrodes on either end. Luckily, there is a device that will let you. Electrons: they are all around us, but we cannot really see or interact with them. ![]()
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