How a CRT TV works





 

CRT TV

CRT TV is an image-receiving device that uses cathode rays. It was widely used as a TV receiver until the mid-2000s. However, it had the disadvantage of being large and heavy. Afterward, it gradually disappeared as LCD and OLED TVs replaced it and is now only used in a few particular purpose.

How CRT TV works

The cathode-ray tube operates in the following sequence.

  1. The Electron gun emits an electron beam.
  2. A deflection coil (deflection yoke) bends the electron beam. (Electron beams are like (-)currents and are bent by magnetic fields.)
  3. The electron beam reaches a screen (surface of the cathode ray tube) coated with a fluorescent material.
  4. The fluorescent material changes the energy of the electron beam into visible light. As a result, the pixel glows at the desired brightness.
  5. The screen reveals an image gradually by changing the magnetic field of the deflection coil.
  6. The above operation is repeated dozens of times per second.

How a cathode ray tube TV works