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- [Derek] The modern era of electronics began with the light bulb but not in the way you might think. Early light bulbs consisted of a carbon filament sealed inside a glass bulb with a vacuum inside. When a potential difference was applied across the filament, current flowed through it, heating it up to over 2000 Kelvin, so hot that it glowed. If there had been much oxygen in the bulb, the filament wouldamp;#39;ve burned immediately. That was the reason for the vacuum. But from the perspective of electronics, the real breakthrough came from a curious observation made by Thomas Edison. He saw that over a bulbamp;#39;s lifetime, the glass became discolored, turning yellow, and then brown, but only on one side. So what was going on? Well, the heated filament emits not only light and heat but also electrons. You can think of them being boiled off the surface of the carbon. This phenomenon, known as thermionic emission, had twice been discovered independently by other scientists up to 27