Transistor (Danish Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Transistor" in Danish language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Danish rank
1st place
1st place
low place
low place
198th place
378th place
1,503rd place
7,943rd place
low place
low place
1,943rd place
4,913th place
216th place
165th place
low place
low place
626th place
708th place

about.com

inventors.about.com

  • "about.com: Inventors Dr. Julius Edgar Lilienfeld". Arkiveret fra originalen 20. juni 2020. Hentet 18. september 2004.

aps.org

cpuscorecard.com

nutsvolts.com

  • nutsvolts.com: The Story of the Transistor Citat: "...However, behind this story of invention is one of collaborative genius, serendipitous mishaps, clashing egos, and secret research...Oleg Losev (or Lossev) was a Russian scientist who made significant discoveries in the field of semiconductor junctions in the 1920s. He observed light emission from silicon carbide point-contact junctions, which was essentially the first light emitting diode (LED)...In 1923, Losev began studying these oscillating crystals. He discovered that biased zinc oxide crystals could amplify a signal. Losev was the first to exploit negative resistance diodes and he realized that they might serve as simpler alternatives to vacuum tubes. He used these diodes to build solid-state versions of amplifiers, oscillators, and regenerative radio receivers at frequencies up to 5 MHz. This was 25 years before the transistor!...In another effort to replace tubes with solid-state devices, Julius Lilienfeld filed a patent in 1926 for a “Method and Apparatus for Controlling Electric Currents”...In 1936, Mervin Kelly — now research director at Bell Labs — decided to establish a department to study solid-state physics in the hope of producing a replacement for the vacuum tube from semiconducting materials...It was here that Russell Ohl discovered the first P-N junction when he accidentally cut a section of silicon ingot across the boundary between the P and N regions...", backup

pbs.org

sites.google.com

technologyreview.com

  • technologyreview.com: No P-N Intended. A cracked crystal launched the silicon revolution Citat: "...Early in 1940 Ohl examined a silicon sample that had a crack down its middle. Something was strange about that crystal: when it was exposed to light, the current flowing between the two sides of the crack jumped significantly. Baffled, Ohl showed the bizarre sample to his Bell colleagues, who were equally amazed. No one had ever seen a photovoltaic reaction like it...", backup

thevalvepage.com

web.archive.org

  • thevalvepage.com: Manufacture of Junction Transistors, backup
  • PBS: The Miracle Month: The Invention of the First Transistor, November 17-December 23, 1947, backup
  • This Month in Physics History – November 17 – December 23, 1947: Invention of the First Transistor, backup
  • The Discovery of the Transistor
  • nutsvolts.com: The Story of the Transistor Citat: "...However, behind this story of invention is one of collaborative genius, serendipitous mishaps, clashing egos, and secret research...Oleg Losev (or Lossev) was a Russian scientist who made significant discoveries in the field of semiconductor junctions in the 1920s. He observed light emission from silicon carbide point-contact junctions, which was essentially the first light emitting diode (LED)...In 1923, Losev began studying these oscillating crystals. He discovered that biased zinc oxide crystals could amplify a signal. Losev was the first to exploit negative resistance diodes and he realized that they might serve as simpler alternatives to vacuum tubes. He used these diodes to build solid-state versions of amplifiers, oscillators, and regenerative radio receivers at frequencies up to 5 MHz. This was 25 years before the transistor!...In another effort to replace tubes with solid-state devices, Julius Lilienfeld filed a patent in 1926 for a “Method and Apparatus for Controlling Electric Currents”...In 1936, Mervin Kelly — now research director at Bell Labs — decided to establish a department to study solid-state physics in the hope of producing a replacement for the vacuum tube from semiconducting materials...It was here that Russell Ohl discovered the first P-N junction when he accidentally cut a section of silicon ingot across the boundary between the P and N regions...", backup
  • technologyreview.com: No P-N Intended. A cracked crystal launched the silicon revolution Citat: "...Early in 1940 Ohl examined a silicon sample that had a crack down its middle. Something was strange about that crystal: when it was exposed to light, the current flowing between the two sides of the crack jumped significantly. Baffled, Ohl showed the bizarre sample to his Bell colleagues, who were equally amazed. No one had ever seen a photovoltaic reaction like it...", backup
  • Web archive backup: Julius Edgar Lilienfeld
  • "about.com: Inventors Dr. Julius Edgar Lilienfeld". Arkiveret fra originalen 20. juni 2020. Hentet 18. september 2004.
  • cpuscorecard.com: Intel Pentium 4 Northwood, backup
  • site.uottawa.ca: ELG4139: Power Diodes and Power Transistors Se side pdf-side 14.
  • Webarchive backup: Perdio Transistor
  • Webarchive backup: History of Radio 3. From Valves to Transistors
  • sites.google.com: Copyright Mark P D Burgess 2009: History of Philips’ Semiconductors in the 1950s Citat: "...It [Philips] developed an all glass hermetic seal using silicone grease to protect the active elements and improve heat transfer...", backup