Abstract

MANY of the investigators who are seeking at the present time to develop a practical system of television make use of the cathode ray oscillograph tube in one form or another, since the electron beam in such a tube provides an easily controlled means of scanning the picture to be transmitted. At the receiving end, the cathode ray tube is employed to build-up the received picture by varying the intensity of the beam in accordance with the light and dark portions of the picture. The ordinary type of cathode ray tube, however, gives only a small range of intensity control without the accompaniment of loss of focus of the spot on the fluorescent screen, and special electrode systems have to be arranged to obtain good intensity modulation in this manner. As an alternative to this method, the intensity of the cathode ray beam may be kept constant but its tranverse velocity may be varied as it moves over the picture, the beam being speeded up over the dark portions of the picture and slowed down over the fight portions. The corresponding motion of the cathode ray beam at the receiving end thus gives varying illumination according to the speed of travel of the spot on the fluorescent screen, and with the aid of the phenomenon of persistence of vision, a true impression of the shades and contrasts in the picture received is obtained.

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