Emitter
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An emitter may be:
In general
- A device used to exude any signal, beacon, light, odor, liquid, fragrance, ionizing particles or any other type of signal.
In horticulture
- A device used in drip irrigation.
In electronics and instrument physics
- Another name for the cathode in vacuum tube technology which emits electrons through thermionic emission or field electron emission.
- Another name for the anode in scientific instruments and techniques based on the emission of ions from a solid surface, for example Atom Probe Tomography.
- The analog of the vacuum tube cathode in transistor technology, though the current flow through it may be either positive or negative, depending on the type of transistor.
- An infrared LED used to emulate a remote control. It can also be wired into the integrated receiver/decoder of any electronic device.
- Lambertian Emitter - a light source whose radiance is according to Lambert's cosine law.
See also
Look up emitter in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- Emission (electromagnetic radiation)
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