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Conquering the Electron offers readers a true and engaging history of the world of electronics, beginning with the discoveries of friction and magnetism and ending with the creation of the smart phone and the iPad.
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					Conquering the Electron offers readers a true and engaging history of the world of electronics, beginning with the discoveries of friction and magnetism and ending with the creation of the smart phone and the iPad.				
				Produktdetails
					- Produktdetails
 - Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
 - Seitenzahl: 360
 - Erscheinungstermin: 24. Februar 2020
 - Englisch
 - Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
 - Gewicht: 534g
 - ISBN-13: 9781493049929
 - ISBN-10: 1493049925
 - Artikelnr.: 57169295
 
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
 - Libri GmbH
 - Europaallee 1
 - 36244 Bad Hersfeld
 - gpsr@libri.de
 
- Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield
 - Seitenzahl: 360
 - Erscheinungstermin: 24. Februar 2020
 - Englisch
 - Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
 - Gewicht: 534g
 - ISBN-13: 9781493049929
 - ISBN-10: 1493049925
 - Artikelnr.: 57169295
 
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
 - Libri GmbH
 - Europaallee 1
 - 36244 Bad Hersfeld
 - gpsr@libri.de
 
By Derek Cheung and Eric Brach
	Part I: Age of Electromagnetism1 The Knowledge Foundation
The Beginning
Scientific Method
The Magic of Static Electricity
The Battery
Linking Electricity and Magnetism
Faraday, the Grand Master
Maxwell, the Peerless Genius
2 The Telegraph
Messages Sent by Electric Current
Annihilating the Time-Space Barrier
Wire Across the Atlantic
Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code
Impact
3 The Telephone
Voices Carried Over Wire
Building the Telephone Business
Patent Battle of the Century
Sound of Music
4 Wireless Telegraphy
Hertz and the Electromagnetic WavesMarconi and the WirelessCrossing the
Ocean Blue5 Lighting and ElectrificationElectrical Lighting
SystemsGenerators and MotorsThe AC-DC War Impact of ElectrificationEdison,
Tesla, and SiemensOne Hundred Years of ElectromagnetismPart II: Age of
Vacuum Electronics6 Current Flow in a VacuumCathode RaysThe Electron
ExposedThe Puzzle of Penetrative LightThe Legacy of Vacuum Electronics7
Controlling the Flow of ElectronsThe Edison EffectThe Vacuum DiodeThe
Magical Third ElectrodeVoices Across the Continent8 RadioChristmas Eve,
1904Core Radio TechnologyRCA and SarnoffArmstrong’s Tragedy9
TelevisionTransmitting Video through the AirA Farm Boy from Utah and a
Russian ÉmigréThe Intellectual Property Battle10 RadarClairvoyanceHunting
the SubmarineThe Most Valuable LuggageRadio NavigationThe Microwave World11
ComputerThe Calculating MachineENIACFoundation of Computer
ArchitectureFramework for the FuturePart III: Age of Solid-State
Electronics
12 The SemiconductorBell LabsKelly’s ForesightThe Unpredictable
Semiconductor13 The Birth of the TransistorThe Flamboyant
GeniusConceptualizing a Solid-State TriodeForging a Better
SemiconductorDiscovery of the p-n JunctionRoadblocksThe Great
BreakthroughThe Roll-Out . . . . . . And the FightShockley’s Last LaughThe
Zeal of Teal and the Élan of PfannResolution14 Launching the Electronics
Industry Sharing TechnologyNew PlayersThe Debut of SiliconThe Transistor
RadioJapanese PioneersThe Transistor Era Begins15 The Dawn of Silicon
ValleyWall Street Journal or Physical Review?Shockley and the Traitorous
EightThe Birth of Venture CapitalThe Changing of the Guard16 The Integrated
Circuit and the ChipKilby and the First Integrated CircuitHoerni and the
Planar Process Noyce and the ChipFairchild and the Silicon Valley
Phenomenon17 Chip Technology BlossomsThe Early Market for ChipsMoore’s
LawMemory ChipsMicroprocessor—ENIAC on a chipThe Personal Computer
UnleashedUbiquitous Silicon18 Evolution of the Electronics
IndustryCompetitors from AsiaComputer-Aided DesignThe Foundries of
TaiwanNoyce, Moore, and GroveTurning Silicon Into Gold19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal DisplaysLuminescent SemiconductorsSemiconductor
LasersFiber Optic CommunicationsLiquid Crystal Displays20 The Information
Age and BeyondPutting It All Together The Information
RevolutionGlobalizationLooking AheadAppendix I: Further Reading
Appendix II: Summary of Key “Conquerors of the Electron”
	The Beginning
Scientific Method
The Magic of Static Electricity
The Battery
Linking Electricity and Magnetism
Faraday, the Grand Master
Maxwell, the Peerless Genius
2 The Telegraph
Messages Sent by Electric Current
Annihilating the Time-Space Barrier
Wire Across the Atlantic
Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code
Impact
3 The Telephone
Voices Carried Over Wire
Building the Telephone Business
Patent Battle of the Century
Sound of Music
4 Wireless Telegraphy
Hertz and the Electromagnetic WavesMarconi and the WirelessCrossing the
Ocean Blue5 Lighting and ElectrificationElectrical Lighting
SystemsGenerators and MotorsThe AC-DC War Impact of ElectrificationEdison,
Tesla, and SiemensOne Hundred Years of ElectromagnetismPart II: Age of
Vacuum Electronics6 Current Flow in a VacuumCathode RaysThe Electron
ExposedThe Puzzle of Penetrative LightThe Legacy of Vacuum Electronics7
Controlling the Flow of ElectronsThe Edison EffectThe Vacuum DiodeThe
Magical Third ElectrodeVoices Across the Continent8 RadioChristmas Eve,
1904Core Radio TechnologyRCA and SarnoffArmstrong’s Tragedy9
TelevisionTransmitting Video through the AirA Farm Boy from Utah and a
Russian ÉmigréThe Intellectual Property Battle10 RadarClairvoyanceHunting
the SubmarineThe Most Valuable LuggageRadio NavigationThe Microwave World11
ComputerThe Calculating MachineENIACFoundation of Computer
ArchitectureFramework for the FuturePart III: Age of Solid-State
Electronics
12 The SemiconductorBell LabsKelly’s ForesightThe Unpredictable
Semiconductor13 The Birth of the TransistorThe Flamboyant
GeniusConceptualizing a Solid-State TriodeForging a Better
SemiconductorDiscovery of the p-n JunctionRoadblocksThe Great
BreakthroughThe Roll-Out . . . . . . And the FightShockley’s Last LaughThe
Zeal of Teal and the Élan of PfannResolution14 Launching the Electronics
Industry Sharing TechnologyNew PlayersThe Debut of SiliconThe Transistor
RadioJapanese PioneersThe Transistor Era Begins15 The Dawn of Silicon
ValleyWall Street Journal or Physical Review?Shockley and the Traitorous
EightThe Birth of Venture CapitalThe Changing of the Guard16 The Integrated
Circuit and the ChipKilby and the First Integrated CircuitHoerni and the
Planar Process Noyce and the ChipFairchild and the Silicon Valley
Phenomenon17 Chip Technology BlossomsThe Early Market for ChipsMoore’s
LawMemory ChipsMicroprocessor—ENIAC on a chipThe Personal Computer
UnleashedUbiquitous Silicon18 Evolution of the Electronics
IndustryCompetitors from AsiaComputer-Aided DesignThe Foundries of
TaiwanNoyce, Moore, and GroveTurning Silicon Into Gold19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal DisplaysLuminescent SemiconductorsSemiconductor
LasersFiber Optic CommunicationsLiquid Crystal Displays20 The Information
Age and BeyondPutting It All Together The Information
RevolutionGlobalizationLooking AheadAppendix I: Further Reading
Appendix II: Summary of Key “Conquerors of the Electron”
Part I: Age of Electromagnetism1 The Knowledge Foundation
The Beginning
Scientific Method
The Magic of Static Electricity
The Battery
Linking Electricity and Magnetism
Faraday, the Grand Master
Maxwell, the Peerless Genius
2 The Telegraph
Messages Sent by Electric Current
Annihilating the Time-Space Barrier
Wire Across the Atlantic
Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code
Impact
3 The Telephone
Voices Carried Over Wire
Building the Telephone Business
Patent Battle of the Century
Sound of Music
4 Wireless Telegraphy
Hertz and the Electromagnetic WavesMarconi and the WirelessCrossing the
Ocean Blue5 Lighting and ElectrificationElectrical Lighting
SystemsGenerators and MotorsThe AC-DC War Impact of ElectrificationEdison,
Tesla, and SiemensOne Hundred Years of ElectromagnetismPart II: Age of
Vacuum Electronics6 Current Flow in a VacuumCathode RaysThe Electron
ExposedThe Puzzle of Penetrative LightThe Legacy of Vacuum Electronics7
Controlling the Flow of ElectronsThe Edison EffectThe Vacuum DiodeThe
Magical Third ElectrodeVoices Across the Continent8 RadioChristmas Eve,
1904Core Radio TechnologyRCA and SarnoffArmstrong’s Tragedy9
TelevisionTransmitting Video through the AirA Farm Boy from Utah and a
Russian ÉmigréThe Intellectual Property Battle10 RadarClairvoyanceHunting
the SubmarineThe Most Valuable LuggageRadio NavigationThe Microwave World11
ComputerThe Calculating MachineENIACFoundation of Computer
ArchitectureFramework for the FuturePart III: Age of Solid-State
Electronics
12 The SemiconductorBell LabsKelly’s ForesightThe Unpredictable
Semiconductor13 The Birth of the TransistorThe Flamboyant
GeniusConceptualizing a Solid-State TriodeForging a Better
SemiconductorDiscovery of the p-n JunctionRoadblocksThe Great
BreakthroughThe Roll-Out . . . . . . And the FightShockley’s Last LaughThe
Zeal of Teal and the Élan of PfannResolution14 Launching the Electronics
Industry Sharing TechnologyNew PlayersThe Debut of SiliconThe Transistor
RadioJapanese PioneersThe Transistor Era Begins15 The Dawn of Silicon
ValleyWall Street Journal or Physical Review?Shockley and the Traitorous
EightThe Birth of Venture CapitalThe Changing of the Guard16 The Integrated
Circuit and the ChipKilby and the First Integrated CircuitHoerni and the
Planar Process Noyce and the ChipFairchild and the Silicon Valley
Phenomenon17 Chip Technology BlossomsThe Early Market for ChipsMoore’s
LawMemory ChipsMicroprocessor—ENIAC on a chipThe Personal Computer
UnleashedUbiquitous Silicon18 Evolution of the Electronics
IndustryCompetitors from AsiaComputer-Aided DesignThe Foundries of
TaiwanNoyce, Moore, and GroveTurning Silicon Into Gold19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal DisplaysLuminescent SemiconductorsSemiconductor
LasersFiber Optic CommunicationsLiquid Crystal Displays20 The Information
Age and BeyondPutting It All Together The Information
RevolutionGlobalizationLooking AheadAppendix I: Further Reading
Appendix II: Summary of Key “Conquerors of the Electron”
				The Beginning
Scientific Method
The Magic of Static Electricity
The Battery
Linking Electricity and Magnetism
Faraday, the Grand Master
Maxwell, the Peerless Genius
2 The Telegraph
Messages Sent by Electric Current
Annihilating the Time-Space Barrier
Wire Across the Atlantic
Intellectual Property Disputes
Morse Code
Impact
3 The Telephone
Voices Carried Over Wire
Building the Telephone Business
Patent Battle of the Century
Sound of Music
4 Wireless Telegraphy
Hertz and the Electromagnetic WavesMarconi and the WirelessCrossing the
Ocean Blue5 Lighting and ElectrificationElectrical Lighting
SystemsGenerators and MotorsThe AC-DC War Impact of ElectrificationEdison,
Tesla, and SiemensOne Hundred Years of ElectromagnetismPart II: Age of
Vacuum Electronics6 Current Flow in a VacuumCathode RaysThe Electron
ExposedThe Puzzle of Penetrative LightThe Legacy of Vacuum Electronics7
Controlling the Flow of ElectronsThe Edison EffectThe Vacuum DiodeThe
Magical Third ElectrodeVoices Across the Continent8 RadioChristmas Eve,
1904Core Radio TechnologyRCA and SarnoffArmstrong’s Tragedy9
TelevisionTransmitting Video through the AirA Farm Boy from Utah and a
Russian ÉmigréThe Intellectual Property Battle10 RadarClairvoyanceHunting
the SubmarineThe Most Valuable LuggageRadio NavigationThe Microwave World11
ComputerThe Calculating MachineENIACFoundation of Computer
ArchitectureFramework for the FuturePart III: Age of Solid-State
Electronics
12 The SemiconductorBell LabsKelly’s ForesightThe Unpredictable
Semiconductor13 The Birth of the TransistorThe Flamboyant
GeniusConceptualizing a Solid-State TriodeForging a Better
SemiconductorDiscovery of the p-n JunctionRoadblocksThe Great
BreakthroughThe Roll-Out . . . . . . And the FightShockley’s Last LaughThe
Zeal of Teal and the Élan of PfannResolution14 Launching the Electronics
Industry Sharing TechnologyNew PlayersThe Debut of SiliconThe Transistor
RadioJapanese PioneersThe Transistor Era Begins15 The Dawn of Silicon
ValleyWall Street Journal or Physical Review?Shockley and the Traitorous
EightThe Birth of Venture CapitalThe Changing of the Guard16 The Integrated
Circuit and the ChipKilby and the First Integrated CircuitHoerni and the
Planar Process Noyce and the ChipFairchild and the Silicon Valley
Phenomenon17 Chip Technology BlossomsThe Early Market for ChipsMoore’s
LawMemory ChipsMicroprocessor—ENIAC on a chipThe Personal Computer
UnleashedUbiquitous Silicon18 Evolution of the Electronics
IndustryCompetitors from AsiaComputer-Aided DesignThe Foundries of
TaiwanNoyce, Moore, and GroveTurning Silicon Into Gold19 LEDs, Fiber
Optics, and Liquid Crystal DisplaysLuminescent SemiconductorsSemiconductor
LasersFiber Optic CommunicationsLiquid Crystal Displays20 The Information
Age and BeyondPutting It All Together The Information
RevolutionGlobalizationLooking AheadAppendix I: Further Reading
Appendix II: Summary of Key “Conquerors of the Electron”







