Today I Learned

  • Thread starter Greg Bernhardt
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In summary: Today I learned that Lagrange was Italian and that he lamented the execution of Lavoisier in France during the French Revolution with the quote:"It took them only an instant to cut off this head and a hundred years might not suffice to reproduce it's...brains."
  • #5,811
When was the first all-solid-state superhet radio reciever built?

In the 1920s, experimenters discovered "negative resistance" effects in point-contact crystal rectifiers. They exploited this property to make amplifiers and oscillators. Russian physicist Oleg Losev took this technology to the ultimate level:

The first person to exploit negative resistance practically was self-taught Russian physicist Oleg Losev, who devoted his career to the study of crystal detectors. In 1922 working at the new Nizhny Novgorod Radio Laboratory he discovered negative resistance in biased zincite (zinc oxide) point contact junctions. He realized that amplifying crystals could be an alternative to the fragile, expensive, energy-wasting vacuum tube. He used biased negative resistance crystal junctions to build solid-state amplifiers, oscillators, and amplifying and regenerative radio receivers, 25 years before the invention of the transistor. Later he even built a superheterodyne receiver.

He died in 1942, so a few years before the Bell Labs point contact transistor was invented.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_detector#Crystodyne:_negative_resistance_diodes

http://www-smirc.stanford.edu/papers/chapter1.pdf
 
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  • #5,812
TIL learned that National Napping Day was created to help make up for the sleep lost during the time change from daylight savings.
It seems the day celebrated varies, often just after the time change.
NATIONAL NAPPING DAY HISTORY
William Anthony, Ph.D., a Boston University Professor, and his wife, Camille Anthony, created National Napping Day in 1999 as an effort to spotlight the health benefits to catching up on quality sleep. "We chose this particular Monday because Americans are more ‘nap-ready’ than usual after losing an hour of sleep to daylight saving time," Anthony said in B.U.’s press release.
 
  • #5,813
TIL about the Kopp-Etchells Effect, which can produce glowing rings from propeller aircraft operating in sandy environments. I'd never heard of this striking visual effect before...

1710874291020.png

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kopp–Etchells_effect

Helicopter rotors are fitted with abrasion shields along their leading edges to protect the blades. These abrasion strips are often made of titanium, stainless steel, or nickel alloys, which are very hard, but not as hard as sand. When a helicopter flies low to the ground in sandy environments, sand can strike the metal abrasion strip and cause erosion, which produces a visible corona or halo around the rotor blades.

The effect is caused by the pyrophoric oxidation of the ablated metal particles.[6][7] In this way, the Kopp–Etchells effect is similar to the sparks made by a grinder, which are also due to pyrophoricity.[8] When a speck of metal is chipped off the rotor, it is heated by rapid oxidation. This occurs because its freshly exposed surface reacts with oxygen to produce heat. If the particle is sufficiently small, then its mass is small compared to its surface area, and so heat is generated faster than it can be dissipated. This causes the particle to become so hot that it reaches its ignition temperature. At that point, the metal continues to burn freely.[9]

Abrasion strips made of titanium produce the brightest sparks,[2][10] and the intensity increases with the size and concentration of sand grains in the air.[11]
 
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Likes Tom.G, jack action, Borg and 3 others
  • #5,814
Very cool. Thanks for posting, Mike.
 
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