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Heinrich Geissler (May 26 1814 - January 24 1879) was a German physicist.

Geissler tubes


Educated by his father as a glassblower and gifted for the design and engineering, Geissler is most remembered for the invention of sealed glass tubes (called Geissler tubes) from which he demonstrated with Julius Plucker emission of a bluish glow by exciting the gas with an induction coil. It was not uncommon for these tubes to display elaborate and artistic shapes, adding much to the optical effect. The device can be regarded as an ancestor of the fluorescent lamp. It was improved by Sir William Crookes and is thus commonly called a Crookes tube.

1814 births | 1879 deaths

External links


Heinrich Geissler | Heinrich Geißler

 

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