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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9

Electron
Unless you're a musician or vocalist who plays or sings only acoustically - never recording or using any sound reinforcement or lighting - then electricity has an impact on your life and art. At the root of electricity is a subatomic particle called the "electron," which is a negatively charged component of an atom that can also move freely through space. The electron is a type of particle known as a "lepton," which, along with quarks, belong to the fermion family of particles. These particles are believed to be the fundamental items in nature, as they cannot currently be broken down into smaller component parts. Though the idea of an atom as a core surrounded by electrically charged particles dates back to Richard Laming in the mid-1800s, the electron was first suggested in 1874 by Irish physicist G. Johnson Stoney, given the name "electron" by Stoney in 1894, then recognized as a subatomic particle by J.J. Thompson at Cambridge Universty in 1897. The electron's charge was first measured in 1909 by physicist Robert Anders Millikan during his famous oil-drop experiment. In 1924, French physicist Louis de Broglie suggested that matter can have both wave and particle properties - the basis for quantum theory and quantum mechanics - which was later demonstrated using a beam of electrons. Electrons orbit the nucleus of the atom, and are responsible to one degree or another for various magnetic, electrical, thermal, optical, chemical, and other properties of matter. (In fact, it is partially the repulsion of electron to electron that makes materials "solid.") Electric current consists of a flow of free electrons in a conductor or semi-conductor. Though our interactions with electricity give us the impression that it "moves" almost instantaneously, electric current/electron flow happens at a quite slow rate of speed, along the line of millimiters per second for DC current in copper wire, or about 1/10th the speed of light (approximately 186,000 miles per second) in a near vacuum. Electromagnetic waves, however, travel at the speed of light in a vacuum, and near the speed of light in the air and in unshielded cables. In a coaxial cable, electromagnetic waves travel at around 125,000 miles per second. Do not worry, the speed of electron flow is not a source of latency in the average recording rig.

E-Bow

Ear Buds

Ear Fatigue

Early Reflections

Earth Bow

EASI

Ebanol

Ebony

EBU

EccoFonic

Echo

ECP

Eddy Current

Edge Diffraction

Edge Yowl

Edison Effect

Edison Plug

Edit

Edit Buffer

Edit Master

Edit Decision List

Effects

Effects Cymbal

Effects Loop

Effects Return

Effects Send

Effects Send

Efficiency

Envelope Generator (EG)

EIA

EIAJ Optical Standard

EIDE

EIN

EL-34

EL-84

Electro-optical or El-Op

Elco (or Edac)

Electret

Electric Frying Pan

Electro-Optical Circuit

Electroacoustic Music

Electrode

Electrode

Electrolyte

Electrolytic Capacitor

Electromagnetism

Electron

Electronic Tuner

Electrophone

Electrostatic

Electrotone

Embedded Servo

Embellishment

Embouchure

EMI

Emphasis

Emulate

Emulator

Enclosure

Encoder

Encryption

Encrypt (Encryption)

End Address

End Block (Tail Block)

Endian

End Pin

End Pin

Endpin

End User

Enharmonic

Ensemble

Envelope

Envelope Follower

Envelope Tracking

Envelopment

EOX

EPP

EPROM

EQ

EQ Creep

Equalizer (EQ, EQing)

Equal Loudness Contour

Equal Temperament

Equipment Rider

Equivalent Input Noise (EIN)

Erase Head

Erhu

Error Correction

ES-120T

eSATA

ESB

ESD (Electrostatic Discharge)

ESS

Ethernet

Euroblock

Event

Event List

Exciter

Excursion

Expander

Expansion Card

Expansion Slot

Export

ExpressCard

Expression

Expression Pedal

Extended Surround

Extension

Extension Cabinet

Extension Manager

Extension Speaker

External Hard Drive

External Power Supply

External Speaker Jack

External Speaker Jack

External Sync

     
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