Selectron tube

Selectron tube

The Selectron was an early form of digital computer memory developed by Jan A. Rajchman and his group at the Radio Corporation of America under the direction of Vladimir Zworykin, of television technology fame.

Development

Development started in 1946 at the behest of John von Neumann of the Institute for Advanced Study [ Metropolis N, Rajchman, JA (1980) Early Research on Computers at RCA "A History of Computing in the Twentieth Century" pp 465-469, ISBN 0124916503, 9780124916500 ] with a planned production of 200 by the end of the year, but production problems meant that they were still not available by the middle of 1948. By that time von Neumann's IAS machine was forced to switch to the Williams tube for storage, and RCA eventually had to scale down the Selectron from storing 4096 bits, to 256. This smaller version saw only two design wins; eventually RCA gave up on the concept.

Design

The original 4096-bit Selectron [ Rajchman JA, (1947) The Selectron -- A Tube for Selective Electrostatic Storage "Mathematical Tables and Other Aids to Computation" 2 (20):359-361 ] was a 10-inch long by 3-inch diameter vacuum tube with a cathode running up the middle, surrounded by two separate sets of wires -- one radial, one axial -- forming a cylindrical grid array, and finally a dielectric storage material coating on the inside of an enclosing metal cylinder called the "signal plate". The bits were discrete physical locations on the signal plate.

The two sets of orthogonal grid wires were normally "biased" slightly positive, so that the electrons from the cathode could flow through the grid and reach the dielectric. The continuous flow of electrons allowed the stored charge to be continuously regenerated by the secondary emission of electrons. To select a bit to be read from or written to, all but two adjacent wires on each of the two grids were biased negative, allowing current to flow to the dielectric at one location only.

Writing was accomplished by selecting a bit, as above, and then sending a pulse of potential, either positive or negative, to the signal plate. With a bit selected, electrons would be pulled onto (with a positive potential) or pushed from (negative potential) the dielectric. When the bias on the grid was dropped, the electrons were trapped on the dielectric as a spot of static electricity.

To read from the device a bit locations was selected and a pulse sent from the cathode. If the dielectric for that bit contained a charge, the electrons would be pushed off the dielectric and read as a brief pulse of current in the signal plate. No such pulse meant that the dielectric must not have held a charge.

The smaller capacity 256-bit "production" device [Rajchman JA (1951) The Selective Electrostatic Storage Tube "RCA Review" 12 (1):53-97 ] was in a similar vacuum tube envelope, but built as an array of discrete "eyelets" on a rectangular plate. The glass envelope of the 256-bit tube was of approximately the same physical dimensions as the earlier cylindrical model. The pin count was reduced from 44 for the 4096-bit device down to 31 pins and two coaxial signal connectors. The 256-bit Selectron was projected to cost about $500 to build full production, and while they were more reliable and faster than the Williams tube, that cost meant they were used only in one computer, the RAND Corporation's JOHNNIAC. [ Greuenberger JF (1968) "The History of the JOHNNIAC" http://www.rand.org/pubs/research_memoranda/RM5654/ pp 25-27 ]

Obsolescence

Both the Selectron and the Williams-Kilburn CRT memories were superseded in the market by the more compact and cost effective magnetic core memory, in the early 1950s.

References

Patents

* Cylindrical 1024-bit Selectron
* Planar 256-bit Selectron

External links

* [http://www.computer50.org/mark1/moore.school/selectron.html The Selectron]
* [http://www-db.stanford.edu/pub/voy/museum/pictures/display/2-1.htm Early Devices display: Memories] – has a picture of a 256-bit Selectron about halfway down the page
* [http://www.RCASelectron.com History of the RCA Selectron]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Selectron — may refer to one of the following: *In particle physics, selectron is a slepton which is the hypothetical supersymmetric partner of an electron *Selectron tube, the form of computer memory …   Wikipedia

  • Tube de Williams — Un tube de Williams. Un tube de Williams, ou tube de Williams Kilburn (du nom des inventeurs Frederic Calland Williams et Tom Kilburn) est un tube cathodique développé en 1946 ou 1947 et utilisé pour enregistrer des données sous forme binaire. Il …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Williams tube — The Williams tube or the Williams Kilburn tube (after inventors Freddie Williams and Tom Kilburn), developed about 1946 or 1947, was a cathode ray tube used to electronically store binary data.Working principleThe Williams tube depends on an… …   Wikipedia

  • Storage tube — Mostly obsolete, a storage tube is a special monochromatic CRT whose screen has a kind of memory (hence the name): when a portion of the screen is illuminated by the CRT s electron gun, it stays lit until a screen erase command is given. Thus,… …   Wikipedia

  • Nixie tube — The ten digits of a GN 4 Nixie tube. A nixie tube is an electronic device for displaying numerals or other information. The glass tube contains a wire mesh anode and multiple cathodes. In most tubes, the cathodes are shaped like numerals.… …   Wikipedia

  • Computer memory — types Volatile RAM DRAM (e.g., DDR SDRAM) SRAM In development T RAM Z RAM TTRAM Historical Delay line memory Selectron tube Williams tube Non volatile …   Wikipedia

  • Computer data storage — 1 GB of SDRAM mounted in a personal computer. An example of primary storage …   Wikipedia

  • Dynamic random-access memory — DRAM redirects here. For other uses, see Dram (disambiguation). Computer memory types Volatile RAM DRAM (e.g., DDR SDRAM) SRAM In development T RAM Z RAM TTRAM Historical Delay line memory Selectron tube Williams tube …   Wikipedia

  • List of vacuum tubes — This is a list of vacuum tubes or thermionic valves. Before the advent of semiconductor devices, hundreds of tube types were used in consumer and industrial electronics; today only a few types are still used in specialized applications. Contents… …   Wikipedia

  • Secondary emission — is a phenomenon where additional electrons, called secondary electrons, are emitted from the surface of a material when an incident particle (often, charged particle such as electron or ion) impacts the material with sufficient energy. The number …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”