Blondel et les oscillations auto-entretenues
Jean-Marc Ginoux (PROTEE), Ren\'e Lozi (JAD)

TL;DR
Blondel's pioneering work on self-sustained oscillations, including the invention of the oscilloscope and the analysis of singing arc and triode oscillations, laid foundational concepts for nonlinear oscillation theory and phase plane analysis.
Contribution
This paper highlights Blondel's early development of the concept of self-sustained oscillations and his mathematical modeling of oscillatory systems before Van der Pol.
Findings
Blondel introduced the term 'self-sustained oscillations' in 1919.
He established differential equations for singing arc and triode oscillations.
Blondel's work predated and influenced later nonlinear oscillation theories.
Abstract
In 1893, the "physicist-engineer" Andr\'e Blondel invents the oscilloscope for displaying voltage and current variables. With this powerful means of investigation, he first studies the phenomena of the arc then used for the coastal and urban lighting and then, the singing arc used as a transmitter of radio waves in wireless telegraphy. In 1905, he highlights a new type of non-sinusoidal oscillations in the singing arc. Twenty years later, Balthasar van der Pol will recognize that such oscillations were in fact "relaxation oscillations". To explain this phenomenon, he uses a representation in the phase plane and shows that its evolution takes the form of small cycles. During World War I the triode gradually replaces the singing arc in transmission systems. At the end of the war, using analogy, Blondel transposes to the triode most of the results he had obtained for the singing arc. In…
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