|
|
|
|
|
by afiori
732 days ago
|
|
There is a way in that it matters: in a vacuum tube you can have cathodic rays but (pragmatically) not anodic rays. IIRC a Veritasium video claims that these where essentially discovered by mistake in lightbulbs, so I suspect that Franklin would have had a hard time finding them... |
|
It's only a "cathode ray" because it's reversed inside the tube: the terminal where positive current comes out of the device is where the negative current emanates internally to go to the other terminal.
An electron beam shooting out of a device is an anode ray.