VACUUM
TUBE
Electron tube consisting of a sealed glass or metal
enclosure from which the air has been withdrawn.
It was used in early electronic circuitry to control
a flow of electrons. In the first half of the 20th century, vacuum tubes
allowed the development of radio broadcasting, long-distance telephone service,
television, and the first electronic digital computers, which were the largest
vacuum-tube systems ever built. Transistors have replaced them in virtually all
applications, but they are still occasionally used in display devices for
television sets and computers (cathode-ray tubes), in microwave ovens, and as
high-frequency transmitters on space satellites.