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Gassiot's Cascade
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I’ve been wanting to reproduce this for some time and finally managed today, although I need to perfect the look a bit. The experiment was first shown by Gassiot in the 1850s. If done correctly it should appear like a plasma ‘waterfall’ cascading over a jug. The jug was made of uranium glass so as to fluoresce with the UV content in the air discharge. I have a uranium glass bowl inside my vacuum bell-jar; the pressure is not quite correct for the effect but I also don’t want to stress my feed through connector or the discharge may break down the epoxy resin I’m insulating it with. The vacuum pressure here is around 3 Torr. The voltage applied is around 900V DC with the thin wire in the bowl being +ve and the metal base -ve. There were some rare complex Geissler tubes made which incorporated a miniature uranium glass vessels to permanently display this arrangement.
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@Max I'm know wondering if this picture related to 3 Torr. I took a few images between 2 and 4 Torr. It is a static volume although. I was considering back filling it with some welding argon to see how that looked. Welding gas tends to be a bit contaminated for discharge work though. I will have another go with this as I have left it set-up to play with. I do expect my epoxy insulated feed-through to fail if I get close to 3kV or maybe even less in the Paschen-minimum environment. So that's another thing to improve. Vacuum parts and feed-throughs are expensive but I'm sure something can be made cheaply that will work for the experiment.
Yes, many thanks to Ria and Sammi for allowing us LG exiles a place to gather.