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  • When the Hoover Dam was completed in 1936,

  • it created a huge source of hydroelectric power

  • and zapped a sleepy desert town to life: Las Vegas, Nevada.

  • With the power supply from the dam,

  • Las Vegas soon exploded with vibrant displays.

  • The source of these dazzling lights was electrified neon gas.

  • There are two tricky obstacles to making lighted signs

  • out of this naturally clear, odorless gas:

  • capturing it and making it glow.

  • French inventor Georges Claude came up with techniques to do both.

  • In 1902,

  • he developed a way of liquefying and separating specific gases from the air,

  • producing neon on an industrial scale for the first time.

  • By 1910, he had come up with a way to trap the gas in a glass tube

  • with a special electrode at either end, and neon lighting was born.

  • In workshops like Claude's,

  • artisans known as tube-benders made neon signs by hand.

  • The tube-benders heated small sections of a long, hollow glass tube

  • and quickly bent them into shape.

  • After the glass cooled, they attached electrodes to each end

  • and removed the air with a vacuum pump.

  • Then, they passed a high voltage current through the tube

  • to remove any impurities on the inside of the glass.

  • Finally, they pumped the neon gas in and sealed off the electrodes.

  • When a neon sign is turned on,

  • the electric current causes some of the neon atoms' electrons to accelerate

  • and break free of their orbits, leaving behind positively charged ions.

  • As these free electrons rush from one electrode to the other,

  • they collide with more neon atoms, causing them to ionize as well.

  • When these excited electrons fall back to their normal energy levels,

  • their excess energy is carried away by photons, or particles of light.

  • All this happens in an instant,

  • and the glow from the photons is what we see when we switch on a neon sign.

  • Though it's common to call any gas-filled sign a "neon" sign,

  • there are actually 5 different gases used in production.

  • Each gas emits photons of a different wavelength when electrified,

  • which correspond to different colors of light.

  • Neon gives off an orange-red glow, argon glows a pale lavender,

  • helium a dusty pink, krypton a silver- white, and xenon a light purple.

  • These 5 gases can be combined with color-coated tubing

  • to create an electrified rainbow of text and images.

  • Business owners soon realized how effective these colorful beacons

  • were for attracting customers.

  • And unlike a light bulb, a neon sign has no incandescent filaments to burn out,

  • and can shine continuously for 40 years before the gas depletes.

  • By the 1930s, neon signs were lighting up storefronts all over the world.

  • Because of the glass tubes' fragile nature,

  • it usually wasn't feasible to ship them over long distances.

  • Instead, most neon signs were created by local neon shops

  • and then installed nearby.

  • Signs with humor, personality, and intricate designs proliferated,

  • no two exactly alike.

  • But by the end of World War II,

  • plastics had become widely available and inexpensive,

  • and plastic signs supplanted neon as messengers of modernity.

  • Many towns removed neon signs they viewed as old-fashioned.

  • Today, neon sign production is only a fraction of what it was at its peak,

  • but the craft of tube bending lives on relatively unchanged.

  • New creations hand-crafted by local artisans

  • join survivors from the heyday of neon,

  • hiding in plain sight in city streets around the world.

When the Hoover Dam was completed in 1936,

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ネオンサインは何で光るのか?360°アニメーション - マイケル・リップマン (What makes neon signs glow? A 360° animation - Michael Lipman)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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