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Vacuum Tube Amplifiers PDF

764 Pages·1998·32.4 MB·English
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VACUUM TUBE AMPLIFIERS MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY RADIATION LABORATORY SERIES Board of Editors Louts h’. RIDENOUR,Editor-in-Chiej GEORGEB. COLLINS,Deputy Editor-in- Chiej BRITTONCHANCE,S. A. GOUDSMIT,R. G. HERB,HUBERTM. JAMES,JULIANK. KNIPP, JAMESL. LAWSONL,EONB.LINFORDC,AROLG.MONTGOMERY,C. ~EWTON, ALBERT M. STONE,Lams A. TURNER,GEORGEE. VALLEY,JR., HERBERTH. WHEATON 1. RADARSYSTEMENGINEERING—h?idenouT 2. RADARAIDSTONavigation—Hall 3. RADARBmcoNs-Roberts 4. LORAN—P;f?TCe,McKenzie, and Woodward & ~UI.SEGENERAToRs~lasoe andLebacqz 6. MICROWAVEMAGNETRONS—COlk’nS 7. KLYSTRONSANDMICROWAVEl’R1oDEs-Hansilton, Knipp, and Kuper 8. ~RINCIPLESOFMICROWAVECIRcuITs—Montgomery, Dike, and Purcell 9. MICROWAVETRANSWSSIONCIRcuIm-12agan 10. WAVEGUIDEHANDBooK—MarcuVilz 11. TECNNIQUEOFMICROWAVEMEASUREMENTS—M~@O?7W?f/ 12. MICROWAVEANTENNATHEORYAND DEslGN—SikeT 13. PROPAGATIONOFSHOBTRADIOWAvEs—KerT 14. MICROWAVEDUPLEXERS—S??tuzz~nand Mo?,tgomery 15. CRYSTALRECTIFIERS—2’orreyand Whitmer 16. MICROWAVEMrxmts-hund 17. COMPONENTSHmImooIc—Blackburn 18 VACUUbITUBEAbfPLIFIERS-Val/e~ and Walbnun 19. WAVEFORbIS-Chan03, Hughesj MacNichol, Sayre, and Walk’ama 20. ELECTRONICTI!JEMEAsuREbfENTs-Chance, Hu18izer, Mac.Vichol, and Williams 21. ELECTRONIC1NsTRuL4ENTs+eenwood, Holdam, and MacRae 22. CATHODERAY TUBEDIsPLAYs—So/ler, Slam, and Valley 23. MICROWAVEREcENERs—Van Voorhis 24. THRESHOLDSIQNALS—LaWSOnand Uhlenbeck 25. THEORYOFSERVOMECHANIshIS-Jame8,Nichols, and Phillips 26. RADARSCANNERSANDRADohIEs-Cady, Karelitz, and Turner 27. COIWPUTINGMECHANISMSANDLINKAGES—&JObOdQ 28. ~NDEx—H8nneu VACUUM TUBE AMPLIFIERS Edited by GEOR.GE 13.VALLEY, JR. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF PHYSICS MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY HENRY WALLMAN ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY OFFICE OF SCIENTIFIC RESE.4RCH AN-D DEVELOPMENT NATIONAL DEFENSE RESEARCH COMMITTEE NEW YORK-TORONTO-LONDON MCGRAW-HILL BOOAr COMPANY, INC. 19j8 1’1 ‘“ VACUUM TUBE AMPLIFIERS COPYRIGHT, 1948, BY THE MCGRAW-HILL BOOK COMPANY, INC. PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA All n“ghts mserued. This book, or partsthereoj, may notbereproduced irtany form without permis~”on of tlu publishers. x rTHE ’MAPL)PRESS COMPANY, YORK. PA. . ~s, IN8T. TFC ~,b + JUN 281957 r,m.-..n * VACUUM TUBE AMPLIFIERS EDITORIAL STAFF GEORGEE. VALLEY,JR. HENRYWALmAN HELENWENETSKY CONTRIBUTING AUTHORS YARDLEYBEERS ERICDURAND HAROLDFLEISCHEII JOHNW. GRAY HARRYJ. LIPKIN DUNCANMACRAE, JR. E. JAYSCHREMP RICHARDQ. TWISS ROBERTM. WALKER HENRYWALLMAN Foreword THEtremendous research and development effort that went into the development of radar and related techniques during World War II resulted not only in hundreds of radar sets for military (and some for possible peacetime) use but also in a great body of information and new techniques in the electronics and high-frequency fields. Because this basicmaterial may be of great value to science and engineering, it seemed most important to publish it as soon as security permitted. The Radiation Laboratory of MIT, which operated under the super- vision of the National Defense Research Committee, undertook the great tssk ofpreparing these volumes. The work described herein, however, is the collective result of work done at many laboratories, Army, Navy, university, and industrial, both in this country and in England, Canada, andother Dominions. The Radiation Laboratory, once its proposals were approved and finances provided by the Office of Scientific Research and Development, choseLouis N. Ridenour as Editor-in-Chief to lead and direct the entire project. An editorial staff was then selected of those best qualified for thistype oftask. Finally the authors for thevarious volumes orchapters orsections were chosen from among those experts who were intimately familiar with the various fields, and who were able and willing to write the summaries of them. This entire staff agreed to remain at work at MIT for sixmonths or more after the work of the Radiation Laboratory wascomplete. These volumes stand as a monument to this group. These volumes serve as a memorial to the unnamed hundreds and thousands of other scientists, engineers, and others who actually carried ontheresearch, development, and engineering work the results of which arehereindescribed. There weresomany involved inthis work and they workedso closely together even though often in widely separated labora- toriesthat itisimpossible to name oreven to know those who contributed toaparticular idea ordevelopment. Only certain oneswho wrote reports orarticles have even been mentioned. But to all those who contributed inanyway to this great cooperative development enterprise, both in this country and in England, these volumes are dedicated. L. A. DUBRIDGE. vii

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RADAR SYSTEM ENGINEERING—h?idenouT. 2. RADAR AIDS TO Navigation—Hall. 3. RADAR BmcoNs-Roberts. 4. LORAN—P;f?TCe,McKenzie, and Woodward. & ~UI.SE GENERAToRs~lasoe and Lebacqz. 6. MICROWAVEMAGNETRONS—COlk'nS. 7. KLYSTRONSAND
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