The thread on blimps which got hijacked into LEDs reminds me of another oft-ignored historical event: semiconductor amplification. It is usually Shockley and co. at Bell who were credited with semiconductor amplification as a result of their invention of the transistor. In fact, semiconductor amplification goes back to 1922 when Oleg Losev investigated the electrical characteristics of various crystals. He made various amplifiers and oscillators using zincite crystals with appropriate biasing. He called this the crystadyne and he had them working up to 5 MHz.
Incidentally, he rediscovered Round's LEDs and published 6 papers on the phenomenon, deducing that it was a quantum effect, describing it as the inverse of Einstein's photoelectric effect.
Losev (transliterated variously Lossev and Losseff) starved to death in January 1942 in the Leningrad siege. He refused to leave Leningrad because he was researching some "promising experiments with silicon". Unfortunately, his notes were lost but it is possible that he had actually discovered the transistor, something we shall never know for sure.
Incidentally, he rediscovered Round's LEDs and published 6 papers on the phenomenon, deducing that it was a quantum effect, describing it as the inverse of Einstein's photoelectric effect.
Losev (transliterated variously Lossev and Losseff) starved to death in January 1942 in the Leningrad siege. He refused to leave Leningrad because he was researching some "promising experiments with silicon". Unfortunately, his notes were lost but it is possible that he had actually discovered the transistor, something we shall never know for sure.
Comment