Edison's Incandescent Lamp: Difference between revisions

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Menlo Park, New Jersey. Edison executed his first patent on a carbon-filament lamp on 1 November 1879; he made a public demonstration at Menlo Park on 31 December 1879. It was on 21 October 1879 that promising results were first achieved in the laboratory: a filament of carbonized thread glowed for more than 14 hours before breaking.
Menlo Park, New Jersey. [[Thomas Alva Edison|Edison]] executed his first patent on a carbon-filament lamp on 1 November 1879; he made a public demonstration at Menlo Park on 31 December 1879. It was on 21 October 1879 that promising results were first achieved in the laboratory: a filament of carbonized thread glowed for more than 14 hours before breaking.  


[[Category:Lasers%2C_lighting_%26_electrooptics]]
[[Category:Lasers,_lighting_&_electrooptics|Category:Lasers,_lighting_&_electrooptics]] [[Category:Light_sources]] [[Category:Electric_lighting]]
[[Category:Light_sources]]
[[Category:Electric_lighting]]

Revision as of 18:08, 30 January 2009

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

Menlo Park, New Jersey. Edison executed his first patent on a carbon-filament lamp on 1 November 1879; he made a public demonstration at Menlo Park on 31 December 1879. It was on 21 October 1879 that promising results were first achieved in the laboratory: a filament of carbonized thread glowed for more than 14 hours before breaking.