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Photoelectric Photometry — The First Fifty Years
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 April 2016
Abstract
This historical review covers the first fifty years of the electrical measurement of starlight, which saw its beginnings in August 1892 when William Monck used a Minchin photovoltaic cell on his refractor in Dublin. The work of Stebbins using photoconductive cells from 1907 and of Guthnick, Stebbins and others using photoelectric cells from 1912 is also discussed. The advances brought about by thermionic amplification and the red-sensitive Cs-O-Ag photocathode in the early 1930s by respectively Whitford and Hall enabled new astrophysical problems to be tackled. Although many observers attempted photoelectric photometry, relatively few were successful during the 1920s and ‘30s. It was not until the introduction of the 1P21 photomultiplier tube that astronomers had a reliable and sensitive detector for photometric observations.
- Type
- The History of Stellar Photometry
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- Copyright
- Copyright © C.J. Butler and I. Elliottt 1993