The early electronic camera tubes (like the
image dissector) suffered from a very disappointing fatal flaw: They scanned the subject and what was seen at each point was only the tiny piece of light viewed at the instant that the scanning system passed over it. A practical functional camera tube needed a different technological approach, which later became known as Charge – Storage camera tube. It was based on a new, hitherto unknown physical phenomenon which was discovered and patented by physicist
Kálmán Tihanyi in Hungary in 1926, however the new phenomenon became widely understood and recognised only from around 1930. The problem of low sensitivity to light resulting in low electrical output from transmitting or "camera" tubes would be solved with the introduction of charge-storage technology by the Hungarian engineer
Kálmán Tihanyi in the beginning of 1925. His solution was a camera tube that accumulated and stored electrical charges ("photoelectrons") within the tube throughout each scanning cycle. The device was first described in a patent application he filed in
Hungary in March 1926 for a television system he dubbed "Radioskop". and so he applied for patents in the United States. Tihanyi's Radioskop patent was added by
UNESCO to the
Memory of the World international register on September 4, 2001. and a patent was issued in 1928. and the file itself was divided into two patents in 1931. in 1937.
Eddie Albert and Grace Brandt reprised their radio show,
The Honeymooners-Grace and Eddie Show for television. The first practical iconoscope was constructed in 1931 by Sanford Essig, when he accidentally left one silvered mica sheet in the oven too long. Upon examination with a microscope, he noticed that the silver layer had broken up into a myriad of tiny isolated silver globules. He also noticed that:
the tiny dimension of the silver droplets would enhance the image resolution of the iconoscope by a quantum leap. As head of television development at
Radio Corporation of America (RCA), Zworykin submitted a patent application in November 1931, and it was issued in 1935. Meanwhile, in 1933,
Philo Farnsworth had also applied for a patent for a device that used a charge storage plate and a low-velocity electron scanning beam. A corresponding patent was issued in 1937, but Farnsworth did not know that the low-velocity scanning beam must land perpendicular to the target and he never actually built such a tube. The iconoscope was presented to the general public in a press conference in June 1933, this new device was between ten and fifteen times more sensitive than the original emitron and iconoscope, and it was used for a public broadcasting by the
BBC, for the first time, on Armistice Day 1937. ==See also==