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arc lamp

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arc lamp

Electric light that uses the illumination of an electric arc maintained between two electrodes. The English chemist Humphry Davy demonstrated the electric arc in 1802 and electric arc lighting was first introduced by English electrical engineer W E Staite in 1846. The lamp consists of two carbon electrodes, between which a very high voltage is maintained. Electric current arcs (jumps) between the two electrodes, creating a brilliant light. Its main use in recent years has been in cinema projectors.

The lamp incorporates a mechanism for automatically advancing the electrodes as they gradually burn away. Modern arc lamps (for example, searchlights) have the electrodes enclosed in an noble gas (rare gas) such as xenon.



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One of the benefits of this is that the diode light is "tuned" for purposes of the lasing more specifically than can be the case with an arc lamp, which has a wider spectrum of output.
As part of a cooperative program with the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), NIST scientists have used the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne National Laboratory to observe x-ray absorption and fluorescence in the various elemental components of a metaihalide arc lamp.
Its xenon arc lamps are full-spectrum (UV, visible light and infrared) to realistically reproduce sunlight, sunlight through window glass and bright indoor lighting.
 
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