Electronic – Edison effect in vacuum

currentvacuum-tube

I was reading this page which says:

What Edison discovered (and it was promptly dubbed the "Edison
effect") was that electrical current doesn't need a wire to move
through. It can travel right through a gas or even a vacuum.

Maxwell introduced the term displacement current for explaining how the capacitor is passing an alternating current through its plates.

But what I understand is that the displacement current does not move in the form of electrons, but it moves/passes in the form of circulating magnetic fields up to the other side of the plate.

The paragraph claims that the electrical current can move in vacuum. But it doesn't state the form of the current.

For the Edison effect in vacuum, is the current moving in the form of actual electrons or magnetic fields?

Best Answer

In Edison effect in vacuum, is the current moving in the form of actual electrons or magnetic fields?

The current that Edison was observing was due to an electron current with electrons moving through a vacuum. The effect in vacuum tubes is from one side of the tube being heated to thermally excite electrons off of a metal plate, where they can transfer charge to another metal plate. So to answer your question the charge was due to actual electrons.

This is different than the fields Gauss was noticing, because he was experimenting with capacitors, the displacement current is due to electric and magnetic currents changing in the capacitor.