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Why would you want to be limited to ultraviolet? If you are aiming to measure the output radiation at the breakout of a high voltage system, which can produce x-rays if sufficiently powered and designed, then you will still be missing the active frequency of the output. Of course, if you were interested in the secondary ionization of the surrounding atmosphere, ultraviolet could be useful. To maximize the ionization, however, means having top load capacity in excess of the potential so that no streamers are produced. I suspect in the case of ionized atmosphere there would be a visual blob roughly equivalent to the shape of the E field. Dave Thomson On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 3:05 PM, illuminated <illumination00@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > In a similar vein to my other message, but more specific, has anyone ever > used a UV filter to view / record high energy experiments? (400 nm to 250 > nm to be specific) > > I am working on putting together a full spectrum camera for such > observations and am curious as to whether others have taken this approach > before to see what additional non visible light spectrum observations may > have been made. > > > -G > _______________________________________________ > Tesla mailing list > Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx > http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla > _______________________________________________ Tesla mailing list Tesla@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.pupman.com/mailman/listinfo/tesla