| Sir
Williama Crooks (1832-1919), built up Varley'a conception. Crooks conducted many important
experiments using self-made vacuum tubes. He noticed that the thin
foil on which the beam of cathode rays was focused got hot. That
proved that the rays, whatever they were, transferred energy. The
second thing he discovered was that the beam of rays exerted some
force - transferred momentum. He demonstrated that using the paddle
wheel which he put inside the vacuum tube. The paddles were in such
direction as to be influenced by the rays' incidence. The wheel
could roll in the tube when there was some force influencing the
paddles (the friction was minimized). The tube laid horizontal. The
wheel began to move when the cathode rays illuminated the paddles.
For Crooks that movement proved that the
cathode rays influenced the paddles with some force. But, in 1903,
in his book "Conduction of Electricity Through
Gases" Thomson proved that
the force with which the cathode rays influenced the paddles was
not strong enough to induce such a fast movement. So Thomson proved that the movement was
really induced by the radiometric effect - the paddles were not
uniformly heated - The heated and unheated sides of the paddles
received different momentum from the particles of the gas in the
tube. The only thing proven by the Crooks's
experiment was that cathode rays heated the paddles. But in the
eighties the experiment was treated the proof for cathode rays
transferring momentum. Crooks was studying the structure of the cathode rays and the reason for them being induced. In the model, he created, the particles of the tail gas in the tube collided with the cathode and that way got negatively charged. After that the particles were repulsed by the cathode, getting high speed. That was because the cathode and the particles were the same charged. The particles, repulsed perpendicular with the respect to the cathode, passed through the cathode dark space and then induced illumination by collisions with the other particles. Such model explained the most of the cathode rays' features and phenomena. |
| Tait yet in 1880 noticed a big mistake in the Crooks's theory although the theory developed in the fall of 70ths of the 19th century. Tait noticed that if cathode rays were really fast moving particles then the light waves emitted by them should be characterized by Doppler shift. They weren't. |
| Wiedemann and the two other German scientists - Eugen Goldstein and Heinrich Hertz - created a different model explaining features of cathode rays. They came to the opinion that cathode rays couldn't consist of particles but were of wave structure. Their conclusion was caused by the fact that all features of cathode rays were the same as of electromagnetic waves. The difference laid only in the two things: the first is that waves don't undergo aberration in the magnetic field and as cathode rays do, and the second is that the waves are emitted in all directions with respect to the surface and the cathode rays are emitted only perpendicular with respect to the surface of the cathode. The authors of the theory stated that the differences could be explained by some unknown features of eteru and by the electrical nature of the rays creation. |

| Artur Schuster, who was English was one of the most important sympathizer of the corpuscular theory for the cathode rays. In his opinion not the moving particles were the source of light but the immovable particles of the gas with which the particles of rays collide. That is why, as he said, the Doppler shift doesn't occur. Also the created by Schuster model of the particles was different; the atoms of the gas dissociate for the positive and negative parts. The positive particles are collected by the cathode and the negative parts are repulsed from it - they create the beam of the cathode rays. He conducted also the experiment where he estimated the maximum and minimum limits of the q/m. (where q is the charge, m. is the mass of the hypothetical particle. |
Heinrich Hertz (1857-1894) tried to refute
the corpuscular model of the cathode rays. The aim of his first
experiment was to prove that the cathode rays can be created
perpetually (constructing a special power supply he created
constant voltage between the electrodes). With such supply the
pulsation (noticed before by the other scientists) did not occcure
- the rays were emitted perpetually (under the limit of the
measuring error). He was of the opinion that the result can be the
point against the corpuscular theory for the rays.
Another aim of his experiments was to prove that the trajectory of the cathode rays movement doesn't have to overlap with the direction of the flow of current. He constructed a machine in which the electrodes were perpendicular . The beam of the cathode rays goes perpendicular with the respect to the cathode and the current flows from the cathode to the anode (as the picture shows). The value and the direction of the flow of current he calculated using a small magnetic needle hung down inside the machine. After conducting the experiments he came to the opinion that it is true that the trajectory of the cathode rays movement doesn't have to overlap with the direction of the flow of current. In the next of his experiments he was trying to prove that cathode rays don't transfer any charge. So he made a new machine. It is shown on the picture below. The system consists of a vacuum tube with the cathode and anode inside. The cathode rays emitted at the cathode are passing through a small slot in the anode and through a wire net (the net has connections with the anode, and it's task was to screen the rest of the tube from electrode influence - electric field was only between the anode and the cathode). The cathode rays going out from the space between the electrodes were flowing through the rest of the tube and incidenced its end. The tube was put inside the sensitive electrometer to detect the charge. If the cathode rays in the tube were transferring any charge the electrometer should detected that. Whereas Hertz noticed only some small, irregular swings of the pointer. His conclusion was that these were secondary effects and that there was no charge of which the particles could be characterized detected. ![]() One more experiment with the aim to prove that the cathode rays don't transfer the charge . He tried to notice whether the rays were undergoing aberration in the transverse electric field. If the rays would be charged the would undergo the aberration. Hertz put two metal strips inside the tube. Those strips were connect to the battery (between battery and the strips there was resistor of a big resistance). The electric field intensity between strips was small. Hertz didn't observe any curving of cathode rays. Using the data from the experiment and the value of the aberration measured in the magnetic field he estimated the velocity of the charged particles of which the cathode rays could consist would have to be equal over 1,1 *108 meters per second. In 1891 Hertz noticed that the cathode rays can pass through a thin layer of metal. He covered a glass shield which contained uranium with a thin gold foil. The cathode rays activated the uranium consisting glass for illumination. When the rays incidenced the layer of gold the glass began to undergo fluorescence . He noticed that the phenomena didn't occur when there was also a thin layer of mica covering the gold. The cathode rays can not only go through gold but also as Hertz showed it through silver, aluminum and alloys of gold or silver and tin, zinc or copper. |
Since 1705 scientists
have discovered many features of the cathode rays. Such great
scientists like . Goldstein, Schuster,
Hertz and Lenard were
studying them. They were for the two different, competitive
theories for the cathode rays' behavior - the wave and the
corpuscular one. Only just in 1897 the more exact model of cathode
rays was formulated. You can read about that in the chapter
"The Thomson's experiment".