The television receiver would use the output of the photoelectric cell to drive a neon lamp.
The adapter drives a neon lamp and a 24-inch Bakelite disk.
Once the neon lamp has reached breakdown, it can support a large current flow.
Small neon lamps are used as indicators in electronic equipment.
The cabinet has a wide bottom section, which houses large floor speakers and glowing neon lamps.
A neon lamp takes very little current to light, and thus can use the user's body capacitance to earth ground to complete the circuit.
In the gloomy light of the neon lamp, the thread was invisible against the dark floor.
In particular, around 1917 Moore developed a "negative glow" neon lamp.
In contrast, neon lamps tend to go on and off at 120 Hz.
His first public display of a neon lamp took place on December 11, 1910, in Paris.