Traveling Wave Tube: Difference between revisions

From ETHW
No edit summary
No edit summary
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''''This article is a stub. You can help the GHN by expanding it.'''''  
<p>'''''This article is a stub. You can help the GHN by expanding it.''''' </p>


University of Birmingham - Birmingham, England. In November 1943 Rudolf Kompfner first demonstrated amplification of radio frequency signals with a traveling wave tube. The device made possible important advances in telecommunications technology. Travelling wave tubes lay at the heart of telecom satellites like Telstar and other systems.
[[Image:Kompfner.jpg|thumb|right|Rudolf Kompfner]]


[[Category:Components%2C_circuits%2C_devices_%26_systems]]
<p>University of Birmingham - Birmingham, England. In November 1943 Rudolf Kompfner first demonstrated amplification of [[Radio|radio]] frequency signals with a traveling wave tube. The device made possible important advances in telecommunications technology. Travelling wave tubes lay at the heart of [[Communications Satellites|telecom satellites]] like Telstar and other systems. </p>
 
[[Category:Components,_circuits,_devices_&_systems]]
[[Category:Electron_devices]]
[[Category:Electron_devices]]
[[Category:Electron_tubes]]
[[Category:Electron_tubes]]

Revision as of 15:55, 2 March 2012

This article is a stub. You can help the GHN by expanding it.

Rudolf Kompfner

University of Birmingham - Birmingham, England. In November 1943 Rudolf Kompfner first demonstrated amplification of radio frequency signals with a traveling wave tube. The device made possible important advances in telecommunications technology. Travelling wave tubes lay at the heart of telecom satellites like Telstar and other systems.