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The Leyden jar owes its name to the place where Peter von Musschenbroek, professor of experimental physics at the University of Leyden, accidentally discovered the "extraordinary" effects of this curious instrument. It was 1745 and, according to the electrical theories commonly accepted at the time, the phenomena of attraction and electrostatic repulsion were due to the motion of an electric fluid that could be transported from metals and aqueous solutions and accumulated and stored in glass containers. It was enough to put a metal rod inside a bottle full of water because electricity will enter, however, paying attention to place the bottle on an insulating material to prevent the electric fluid slip away, through a conductor, towards the earth. When Musschenbroek, contrary to distraction to this experimental rule, filled the bottle holding it in his hand, he was overcome by the feeling that he felt in touch with the other hand the bottle knob. The intensity of the shock caused him to make public the results of its accidental discovery and, from that moment, physicists from across Europe rushed to repeat the experiment. Allowing to accumulate large amounts of electricity, the Leyden jar became a key instrument of "electrical science", it is used to produce large sparks which to deliver strong shocks for therapeutic purposes.

 
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Work load (and download) of a capacitor: work necessary to bring a charge Q on the capacitor plates. When discharging the capacitor, closing the circuit between the plates, the energy supplied by the capacitor is equal to the charging work.

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Glossary

Capacitor: The capacitors are accumulators of electric charges consist of two conductors (said armor) separated by an insulator (dielectric).

Electrostatic capacity: constant relationship between the position of a conductor and its potential. In the case of a capacitor the capacity expresses the ratio between the charge present on each armature and the potential difference between the plates. The capacity depends on the geometric shape of the conductor.

 
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The transistor was the first electronic amplifying device, capable of substituting De Forest's Vacuum tube with equivalent or superior performance and definitely smaller in size.

It was developed in the Bell Labs, the famous laboratories of the American telephone company, in 1947-48. In 1954-55, while the transistor was being tested in the field of computer science, still limited to few pioneers, the American company Texas Instruments was experimenting, and then marketed, a new use for the product which proved to be much more for the “masses”: a transistor radio charged by batteries, decisively smaller and lighter (less than 1/2 a kilo) than the portable radios available at the time.

Also in 1954, the physicist Edwin Armstrong, inventor of frequency modulation radio, committed suicide because he was convinced that his invention would not have been applicable commercially due to the opposition of the big companies in the sector. In the years that followed, frequency modulation did affirm itself thanks as well to the diffusion of portable radios.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 

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