Neon lamp

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(Redirected from Neon light)

Image:Neonowki.jpg A neon lamp is a gas discharge lamp containing neon gas (or in types with different colors also other noble gas) at low pressure. A small electric current, which may be AC or DC, is passed through the tube, causing it to glow orange-red. In AC-excited lamps, both electrodes produce light, but in a DC-excited lamp, only the negative electrode glows. This simple fact can be used to distinguish between AC and DC sources using a neon lamp and to distinguish the polarity of DC sources.

Small neon lamps are used as indicators in electronic equipment. Larger lamps are used in neon signage. Because of their comparatively fast response time, in the early development of television, neon lamps were used as the light source in many mechanical-scan TV displays.

Image:Small neon lamp.jpg

Most small neon (indicator-sized) lamps, such as the ubiquitous NE-2, start conducting at a fairly consistent 60 to 80 volts, so they were used as very simple voltage regulators or overvoltage protection devices. They were also used for a variety of other purposes; since a neon lamp can act as a relaxation oscillator with an added resistor and capacitor, it can be used as a simple flashing lamp or audio oscillator. In the 1960s General Electric (GE), Signalite, and other firms made special extra-stable neon lamps for electronic uses. They even devised digital logic circuits, binary memories, and frequency dividers using neons. Such circuits appeared in electronic organs of the 1950s, as well as some instrumentation.

Neon lamps are negative resistance devices where increasing the current flow through the device increases the number of ions, thereby decreasing the resistance of the lamp, thereby allowing increased current flow. Because of this, the electrical circuitry external to the neon lamp must provide a means to limit the current flow in the circuit or else the current will increase until the neon lamp destroys itself. For indicator-sized lamps, a resistor is conventionally used to limit the current flow. For sign-sized lamps, the high voltage transformer usually limits the available current, often by its having a large amount of leakage inductance in the secondary winding.

Indicator-sized lamps can also be filled with argon or xenon rather than neon, or mixed with it. While most operating characteristics remain similar, the lamps light with a bluish glow (including some ultraviolet) rather than neon's characteristic reddish-orange glow; the UV radiation then can be used to excite a phosphor coating of the inside of the bulb and provide a wide range of various colors, including white. A mixture of neon and krypton can be used for green glow.

Neon lamps, due to their low current consumption, are good as nightlights.

A helium-neon laser is a distant cousin of a neon lamp.

History

Georges Claude invented perhaps the first neon lamp in 1902, and first displayed it in public in 1910.

See also

External links

Sources of light / lighting:

Natural/prehistoric light sources:

Bioluminescence | Celestial objects | Lightning

Image:Compact fluorescent transpa.png

Combustion-based light sources:

Acetylene/Carbide lamps | Candles | Davy lamps | Fire | Gas lighting | Kerosene lamps | Lanterns | Limelights | Oil lamps | Rushlights

Nuclear/direct chemical light sources:

Betalights/Trasers | Chemoluminescence (Lightsticks)

Electric light sources:

Arc lamps | Incandescent light bulbs | Fluorescent lamps

High-intensity discharge light sources:

Ceramic Discharge Metal Halide lamps | HMI lamps | Mercury-vapor lamps | Metal halide lamps | Sodium vapor lamps | Xenon arc lamps

Other electric light sources:

Electroluminescent (EL) lamps | Globar | Inductive lighting | LEDs | Neon and argon lamps | Nernst lamp | Sulfur lamp | Xenon flash lamps | Yablochkov candles



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