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Lilienfeld radiation

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Visible Lilienfeld radiation in an Ef89 vacuum tube.

Lilienfeld radiation, named after Julius Edgar Lilienfeld, is electromagnetic radiation produced when electrons hit a metal surface.

The Smith–Purcell effect is believed to be a variant of Lilienfeld radiation.

Lilienfeld radiation is shown as Transition radiation by Vitaly Ginzburg and Ilya Frank in 1945

References

  1. Rabinowitz, Mario (1989). "Lilienfeld Radiation Brought to Light" (PDF). Physics Today. 42 (6): 114. arXiv:physics/0307047. Bibcode:1989PhT....42f.114R. doi:10.1063/1.2811070. S2CID 118998155.
  2. Mario Rabinowitz. Lilienfeld Transition Radiation Brought to Light (PDF).
  3. V. L. Ginsburg, I. M. Frank: In: J. Exp. Theoret. Phys. (UdSSR). 16, 1946, S. 15.
  4. Jochen Schnapka. "Doppelspurerkennung unter Verwendung der Kathodenauslese am ZEUS-Übergangsstrahlungsdetektor". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)


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