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Radio. *Warning* Heavy Science Content Ahead. Baghdad battery – 250 BCE. Electricity was a heavy duty toy for decades, including Ben Franklin and his kite, people rubbing cat skins on glass or amber rods, spinning sulfur balls, and sparking everything and everyone in sight.
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Electricity was a heavy duty toy for decades, including Ben Franklin and his kite, people rubbing cat skins on glass or amber rods, spinning sulfur balls, and sparking everything and everyone in sight
Luigi Galvani - 1786 • Believed everything contained electricity • Looked for “animal magnetism” • Touched different metals to frogs’ legs which twitched
Alessandro Volta - 1796 • Volta took Galvani’s experiment and showed that it was the current produced by the different metals that caused the twitch • Built a pile of alternating sandwiches of zinc and copper in an acid and created electicity
Oersted’s experiment - 1820 • In a lecture in Copenhagen he performed an experiment to demonstrate there was no connection between electricity and magnetism by showing that an electric current passing through a wire wouldn’t affect a nearby compass needle
Imagine his surprise when the needle swung the moment he turned on the current • He demonstrated that electricity created a magnetic field
William Sturgeon - 1825 • Created the first electromagnet by wrapping wire around a soft iron bar and sending a current through the wire • Electricity can create magnetism
Michael Faraday - 1826 • Reversed Sturgeon’s experiment • Showed that magnetism could create an electric current
Used a an on-off switch – the telegraph key – to turn an electric current on and off, sending pulses of current through a wire to an electromagnet that would click in time to the pulses
Examined physical sensations • Can you feel colors • Can you hear shapes • Can you smell sounds • Discovered that each sense detects different things • We think this is obvious, but no one had proven it before. Remember “common sense”?
Meuller’s pupil • Investigated hearing • Noticed sound produced vibrations
Did the vibrations operate at different frequencies? • They did • Thus, sound traveled at different frequencies • Used an electromagnet to attract the arms of a tuning fork, causing it to vibrate and produce sound
Leon Scott de Martinville - phonautograph - 1857 • Attached a bristle to a membrane at the end of a cone, set the bristle to touch a piece of smoked glass • Spoke into the cone • membrane vibrated to the sound and the bristle etched a wavy line onto the smoked glass
The Telephone - 1876 • Scott’s membrane, Faraday’s electromagnet, Oersted’s and Sturgeon’s electromagnet, Morse’s wire and electrical current, Heimholtz’s vibration, Scott’s membrane
Hemholtz’s pupil • Investigated whether electricity traveled in frequencies the way sound did
Demonstrated that electricity traveled through air at specific frequencies, just like it did through wires
Tesla coil - 1891 • Developed the first amplifier coil, the Tesla coil • Raised the voltage of an electrical current high enough to allow the air to conduct the current • Key to wireless transmission of radio waves
Felt that the variation in electrical amplitude created by a voice, just like on a telephone, could be carried by electrical wave of a radio signal • Did the first voice broadcast in 1900 • Short range • Poor quality • Needed far more power
Developed the Alexanderson Alternator, a machine capable of generating the power, up to 100,000 hertz, that Fessenden needed to piggyback voice onto radio waves • In Dec. 1906, Fessenden did the first good voice and music broadcast, going hundreds of miles • Poetry and a Bible reading • A woman singing opera • A violin playing a Christmas carol
The audion tube is actually a Fleming valve (British term for tube) invented in England • de Forest simply added the bent wire
Audion tube amplified the radio signal the way the Alexanderson generator increased the electrical power • de Forest didn’t know how the audion worked • Another man did