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Antique Electric Egg

$ 1267.2

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Original/Reproduction: Original

    Description

    Antique Electric Egg. Shipped with USPS Priority Mail- flat shipping, Insurance included. Wood stand is free with item but will be shipped separately.
    Here is a history on Electric Eggs
    Electric egg constructed
    of uranium glass. Electric eggs were constructed during the time period during which high vacuum and high voltage became available. The electric egg was
    a precursor or stepping stone to the development of x-rays and the cathode ray tube. There does not appear to be any cracks in the glass.
    The glass glows when illuminated by ultraviolet light. There is some white powder inside the egg which may be present to enhance the glowing characteristics of tube when it is activated.
    The egg was constructed by the famous low temperature physicists
    Ferdinand Brickwedde. ( https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ferdinand_Brickwedde )  and his wife Marion Langhorne.  The egg was acquired by me when I was a graduate student at Pennsylvania State University in 1983. Pennsylvania State University was getting rid of all old equipment items in a storage room. Ferdinand Brickwedde and his wife Marion Langhorne were with me the day I acquired the electric egg.  We were discussing the electric egg that I acquired and I stated , “Look at the Mickey Mouse vacuum seals!“.  Marion Langhorne smiles and forcefully said, “Oh no, that is not Mickey Mouse, it is how we made the seals then, we used sealing wax and string.”  They had constructed this electric egg for research. Ferdinand Brickwedde  and I shared office/lab space in Davey Laboratory at Pennsylvania State university. Ferdinand Brickwedde and my PhD thesis (E. R. Generazio, Ph.D. Thesis, Pennsylvania State University (1983), PUB No. 83–27, 492 University Microfilms, Ann Arbor, Michigan. ) advisor Dr. Robert Reed also wrote publications together in  low temperature physics.
    https://asa.scitation.org/doi/10.1121/1.1912939
    Vintage Electronics- no returns accepted