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Working glass

Having access to a glass workshop certainly helps with experiments at the technical university of Eindhoven, the Netherlands. Shown here is a glass blower polishing the extremities of a glass tube section aimed for a use in a plasma reactor. Such activity was quite common back in the days when lamps were still being manufactured in town at the Philips lamp research lab at Emmasingel, in the city center. It is interesting to note that the technician is wearing didymium glasses which blocks off the sodium emission and part of the shortwave infrared radiation coming from the white hot glass extremity.


Keywords: Miscellaneous

Working glass


Having access to a glass workshop certainly helps with experiments at the technical university of Eindhoven, the Netherlands. Shown here is a glass blower polishing the extremities of a glass tube section aimed for a use in a plasma reactor. Such activity was quite common back in the days when lamps were still being manufactured in town at the Philips lamp research lab at Emmasingel, in the city center. It is interesting to note that the technician is wearing didymium glasses which blocks off the sodium emission and part of the shortwave infrared radiation coming from the white hot glass extremity.

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Keywords:Miscellaneous
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Date added:Jan 18, 2025
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Comment 1 to 3 of 3
Page: 1

Ria   [Jan 18, 2025 at 11:27 PM]
Another fascinating picture. The skill that is required for this sort of work is something else Cool
Tuopeek   [Jan 19, 2025 at 03:28 PM]
Great to have access to this kind of equipment. Even though I lecture part-time at a local college I have more equipment at home than they have. Sad times, colleges and universities here have been ditching labs of equipment equipment for years, replacing it with PCs running simulation SW. Really quite sad.
Max   [Jan 21, 2025 at 09:36 PM]
In many cases computers and software cost less than the actual equipment, and there's less risks associated to activities too, so it's a no-brainer for bean counters. It's a shame, really, because nothing replace the quality of experiences with the real things...

Ria - I agree, it's an art.

Comment 1 to 3 of 3
Page: 1