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cathode In the EW or refining process, the electrical pole to which copper ions plate or attach. Cathodes may be made of stainless steel blanks or copper starter sheets. In the SX/EW process, the electrical pole to which copper ions plate or adhere; also the copper slab thereby produced.
Ãâó: www.phelpsdodge.com/Glossary/Glossary.htm
cathode refined from anodes in the electrolytic refinery into plates of 99.99% pure copper; these are shipped to factories to be melted and cast into shapes ready for rolling, drawing, or extruding into finished products.
Ãâó: pangea.stanford.edu/~kurt/kurt-more-lingo.html
cathode-ray tube Red, green and blue electron beams, generated by the cathode-ray tubes, each project the image. The three projected images must then be aligned to get a useable picture.
Ãâó: www.projectorbuyingguide.com/otherfeatures.html
cathode-ray tube An analog display device using a vacuum tube that generates images on a layer of phosphors driven by an electron beam, or gun, inside the tube. It is commonly referred to as a picture tube and is often used in front-room projector models.
Ãâó: www.thejournal.com/magazine/vault/A4867.cfm
cathode-ray tube CRT stands for cathode-ray tube. Invented in 1897, even nowadays it is the most common display technology for televisions. The tube uses an electron beam to scan lines on the screen coated with phosphor, which glows when struck by the beam. The other display technology being used more and more often nowadays in television sets is LCD.
Ãâó: www.hdtv-source.com/hdtv-terms.php
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