Everett who helped to greatly increase Thomson's experimental range. About 1894 he acquired an excellent glassblower named E. He was very fumble fingered and had a tendancy to break things. Incidently, Thomson was a very unhandy person. The amount the cathode ray bent from the straight line using either the electric field or the magnetic field allowed Thomson to calculate the e/m ratio. This allowed him to use either electrical or magnetic or a combination of both to cause the cathode ray to bend. Thomson also could use magnets, which were placed on either side of the straight portion of the tube just to the right of the electrical plates. The two plates about midway in the CRT were connected to a powerful electric battery thereby creating a strong electrical field through which the cathode rays passed. The long glass finger (in the photo) projecting downward from the right-hand globe is where the entire tube was evacuated down to as good as a vacuum as could be produced, then sealed. Thomson in 1897 announcing the discovery of the electron. Th diagram below appeared in an article by J.J. It is about one meter in length and was made entirely by hand. The image below of a CRT used by Thomson in his experiments. Only the end of the CRT can be seen to the right-hand side of the picture. Thomson and a cathode ray tube from around 1897, the year he announced the discovery of the electron. Thomsons experiment and the charge-to-mass ratio of the electron. Thomson used results from cathode ray tube (commonly abbreviated CRT) experiments to discover the electron. A debate about whether cathode rays were electromagnetic waves or streams of.
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