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Comment by hazeii

8 years ago

Neon bulbs require a certain voltage to strike (for small ones, several 10's of volts). Until they are struck they are very high resistance, once alight they are low resistance until the voltage drops well below the striking voltage.

This leads to an easy way to make a neon oscillator; put a capacitor across the bulb, and a high value resistor in series to a 90v supply. The capacitor charges to the strike voltage, then discharges until the neon extinguishes; the oscillation rate and ratio characterises the particular bulb.

Don't know if it's still true, but they used to include radioactive tracers in the neon to reduce the striking voltage (also I believe the striking voltage varies with incident illumination).

> I believe the striking voltage varies with incident illumination

That is the principle behind this entry for the flashing light prize:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8VJft5Xq5g

  • Thanks for that! Great demo, and using strong UV shows the effect in spades (I'd guess in this case you wouldn't want the radioactivity, so the illumination effect from the photons is more pronounced).