Russell Ohl discovers the p-n junction and photovoltaic effects in silicon that lead to the development of junction transistors and solar cells.
In the mid-1930s Russell Ohl, an electrochemist at Bell Telephone Labs in Holmdel, NJ, began investigating the use of silicon rectifiers as radar detectors. He found that increasing the silicon purity helped improve their detection ability. On 23 February 1940, he tested a small silicon slab that yielded strange, surprising results. When exposed to bright light, the current flowing through the slab jumped appreciably. He also noticed that different parts of the crystal yielded opposite electrical effects when tested with a "cat's whisker" style probe. Ohl and colleague Jack Scaff found that a seam in the slab marked the separation of the silicon into regions containing distinct kinds of impurities. One impurity, the element phosphorus, yielded a slight excess of electrons in the sample while the other, boron, led to a slight deficiency (later recognized as "holes"). They called the regions n-type (for negative) and p-type (positive); the surface or "barrier" where these regions met became known as a "p-n junction." Light striking this junction stimulated electrons to flow from the n-side to the p-side, resulting in an electric current. Ohl had discovered the photovoltaic effect that powers today's solar cells (1954 Milestone). William Shockley's conception of the junction transistor in 1948 (1948 Milestone) derived from Ohl's serendipitous 1940 discovery. The p-n junction became the most common form of rectifier used in the electronics industry and has since become a fundamental building block in the design of semiconductor devices.
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Basically the same as in any computer, as well as the same as in any electronic device.
tv lol
Modern computers are usually electronic. In 1936 long before the first computer was actually built Alan Turing did a mathematical proof in his paper "On Computable Numbers" showing that computers inherently have many limitations that make it impossible for them to solve large classes of problems.
Well, it depends what your definition of computers are. During World War 2, radar and other resources like that were used. But The "PC" we know today- Originated around the 60's-70's, and the technology really took off in the late 90's due to Bill Gates, Netscape, and all of the internet pioneers who worked countless hours improving the PC and the internet especcially.
pretty much like any other electronic device.