Close
Logo
Cart (0)
Login
Register
0
Selected 
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
 Click here to refresh results
 Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
 Hide details
play button
Conceptually similar
Discharge in Geissler tubes containing rarefied gases, 1887.
AR916343 
Various substances fluorescing in vacuum tubes of different shapes, 1903.
AR922861 
Manufacturing electric light bulbs, c1883 (1896).
AR923105 
Electricity, c1850.
AR922855 
Morse electric printing telegraph, c1882.
AR923134 
Morse electric printing telegraph, c1882.
AR923130 
William Crookes, British physicist and chemist, 1903. Artist: Spy
AR922296 
Rear view of Charles Wheatstone's electric (railway) telegraph, 1850.
AR921438 
Collecting cocoa, Venezuela, 1892.
AR925909 
Gas lighting, 1814.
AR922886 
Distillation, 1882. Artist: Anon
AR922145 
Davy's electric egg, 1883.
AR922814 
Thomas Alva Edison's kinetographic theatre, c1892.
AR923824 
Thomas Edison's improved form of JW Trowbridge's electric dynamometer, 1879.
AR923267 
Spectrum analysis, 1873.
AR922983 
John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh, British scientist, 1899.
AR922281 
Operator receiving a message in Morse code on an electric printing telegraph, 1887.
AR923148 
'Cricket Field at Bournville', 1892.
AR925350 
'A Quiet Corner at Bournville', 1892.
AR924932 
Communicating by speaking tube, 1882.
AR921432 
Electric discharges in rarefied gases, 1892. 
Electric discharges in rarefied gases, 1892. 2,3,5 and 6: Geissler tubes. 1: fluorescence of sulphuret of calcium. 4: nitrogen vacuum (spirals of uranium glass). 7: hydrogen. From The New Popular Educator. (London, 1892). 
Unique Identifier AR924985 
Type Image 
Purpose Public 
Size 3457px × 5052px 
Photo Credit HIP / Art Resource, NY 
 Add to lightbox
 Add to cart
Tags
19th century
Chemistry
CHROMOLITHOGRAPH
color
discharge tube
ELECTRIC
electrical discharge tube
Electricity
gas
GEISSLER
Geissler tube
Glass
Heinrich Geissler
NINETEENTH CENTURY
Oxford Science Archive
Physics
Print Collector1
Science