|
|
|
| Home
| Tesla
Writings | Tesla Patents
| Tesla FAQ | Tesla
On AC |
Tesla
Books | Glossary
| Links Bookstore | Newsletter | Wholesale Book List | Contact Us | Reference Section | Search | Site Map |
|
THE TRUE WIRELESSby Nikola Tesla |
|
Electrical Experimenter, May 1919 In this remarkable and complete story of his discovery of the "True
Wireless" and the principles upon which transmission and reception, even
in the present day systems, are based, Dr. Nikola Tesla shows us that he
is indeed the "Father of the Wireless." To him the Hertz wave theory is a
delusion; it looks sound from certain angles, but the facts tend to prove
that it is hollow and empty. He convinces us that the real Hertz waves are
blotted out after they have traveled but a short distance from the sender.
It follows, therefore, that the measured antenna current is no indication
of the effect, because only a small part of it is effective at a distance.
The limited activity of pure Hertz wave transmission and reception is here
clearly explained, besides showing definitely that in spite of themselves,
the radio engineers of today are employing the original Tesla tuned
oscillatory system. He shows by examples with different forms of aerials
that the signals picked up by the instruments must actually be induced by
earth currents—not etheric space waves. Tesla also disproves the
"Heaviside layer" theory from his personal observations and tests.
EDITOR. Ever since the announcement of Maxwell's electro-magnetic theory
scientific investigators all the world over had been bent on its
experimental verification. They were convinced that it would be done and
lived in an atmosphere of eager expectancy, unusually favorable to the
reception of any evidence to this end. No wonder then that the publication
of Dr. Heinrich Hertz's results caused a thrill as had scarcely ever been
experienced before. At that time I was in the midst of pressing work in
connection with the commercial introduction of my system of power
transmission, but, nevertheless, caught the fire of enthusiasm and fairly
burned with desire to behold the miracle with my own eyes. Accordingly, as
soon as I had freed myself of these imperative duties and resumed research
work in my laboratory on Grand Street, New York, I began, parallel with
high frequency alternators, the construction of several forms of apparatus
with the object of exploring the field opened up by Dr. Hertz. Recognizing
the limitations of the devices he had employed, I concentrated my
attention on the production of a powerful induction coil but made no
notable progress until a happy inspiration led me to the invention of the
oscillation transformer. In the latter part of 1891 I was already so far
advanced in the development of this new principle that I had at my
disposal means vastly superior to those of the German physicist. All my
previous efforts with Rhumkorf coils had left me unconvinced, and in order
to settle my doubts I went over the whole ground once more, very
carefully, with these improved appliances. Similar phenomena were noted,
greatly magnified in intensity, but they were susceptible of a different
and more plausible explanation. I considered this so important that in
1892 I went to Bonn, Germany, to confer with Dr. Hertz in regard to my
observations. He seemed disappointed to such a degree that I regretted my
trip and parted from him sorrowfully. During the succeeding years I made
numerous experiments with the same object, but the results were uniformly
negative. In 1900, however, after I had evolved a wireless transmitter
which enabled me to obtain electro-magnetic activities of many millions of
horse-power, I made a last desperate attempt to prove that the
disturbances emanating from the oscillator were ether vibrations akin to
those of light, but met again with utter failure. For more than eighteen
years I have been reading treatises, reports of scientific transactions,
and articles on Hertz-wave telegraphy, to keep myself informed, but they
have always imprest me like works of fiction.
The history of science shows that theories are perishable. With every
new truth that is revealed we get a better understanding of Nature and our
conceptions and views are modified. Dr. Hertz did not discover a new
principle. He merely gave material support to hypothesis which had been
long ago formulated. It was a perfectly well-established fact that a
circuit, traversed by a periodic current, emitted some kind of space
waves, but we were in ignorance as to their character. He apparently gave
an experimental proof that they were transversal vibrations in the ether.
Most people look upon this as his great accomplishment. To my mind it
seems that his immortal merit was not so much in this as in the focusing
of the investigators' attention on the processes taking place in the
ambient medium. The Hertz-wave theory, by its fascinating hold on the
imagination, has stifled creative effort in the wireless art and retarded
it for twenty-five years. But, on the other hand, it is impossible to
over-estimate the beneficial effects of the powerful stimulus it has given
in many directions.
As regards signaling without wires, the application of these radiations
for the purpose was quite obvious. When Dr. Hertz was asked whether such a
system would be of practical value, he did not think so, and he was
correct in his forecast. The best that might have been expected was a
method of communication similar to the heliographic and subject to the
same or even greater limitations.
In the spring of 1891 I gave my demonstrations with a high frequency
machine before the American Institute of Electrical Engineers at Columbia
College, which laid the foundation to a new and far more promising
departure. Altho the laws of electrical resonance were well known at that
time and my lamented friend, Dr. John Hopkinson, had even indicated their
specific application to an alternator in the Proceedings of the Institute
of Electrical Engineers, London, Nov.13, 1889, nothing had been done
towards the practical use of this knowledge and it is probable that those
experiments of mine were the first public exhibition with resonant
circuits, more particularly of high frequency. While the spontaneous
success of my lecture was due to spectacular features, its chief import
was in showing that all kinds of devices could be operated thru a single
wire without return. This was the initial step in the evolution of my
wireless system. The idea presented itself to me that it might be
possible, under observance of proper conditions of resonance, to transmit
electric energy thru the earth, thus dispensing with all artificial
conductors. Anyone who might wish to examine impartially the merit of that
early suggestion must not view it in the light of present day science. I
only need to say that as late as 1893, when I had prepared an elaborate
chapter on my wireless system, dwelling on its various instrumentalities
and future prospects, Mr. Joseph Wetzler and other friends of mine
emphatically protested against its publication on the ground that such
idle and far-fetched speculations would injure me in the opinion of
conservative business men. So it came that only a small part of what I had
intended to say was embodied in my address of that year before the
Franklin Institute and National Electric Light Association under the
chapter "On Electrical Resonance." This little salvage from the wreck has
earned me the title of "Father of the Wireless" from many well-disposed
fellow workers, rather than the invention of scores of appliances which
have brought wireless transmission within the reach of every young amateur
and which, in a time not distant, will lead to undertakings overshadowing
in magnitude and importance all past achievements of the engineer. The popular impression is that my wireless work was begun in 1893, but
as a matter of fact I spent the two preceding years in investigations,
employing forms of apparatus, some of which were almost like those of
today. It was clear to me from the very start that the successful
consummation could only be brought about by a number of radical
improvements. Suitable high frequency generators and electrical
oscillators had first to be produced. The energy of these had to be
transformed in effective transmitters and collected at a distance in
proper receivers. Such a system would be manifestly circumscribed in its
usefulness if all extraneous interference were not prevented and
exclusiveness secured. In time, however, I recognized that devices of this
kind, to be most effective and efficient, should be designed with due
regard to the physical properties of this planet and the electrical
conditions obtaining on the same. I will briefly touch upon the salient
advances as they were made in the gradual development of the system.
The high frequency alternator employed in my first demonstrations is
illustrated in Fig. 1. It comprised a field ring, with 384 pole
projections and a disc armature with coils wound in one single layer which
were connected in various ways according to requirements. It was an
excellent machine for experimental purposes, furnishing sinusoidal
currents of from 10,000 to 20,000 cycles per second. The output was
comparatively large, due to the fact that as much as 30 amperes per square
millimeter could be past thru the coils without injury.
The diagram in Fig. 2 shows the circuit arrangements as used in my
lecture. Resonant conditions were maintained by means of a condenser
subdivided into small sections, the finer adjustments being effected by a
movable iron core within an inductance coil. Loosely linked with the
latter was a high tension secondary which was tuned to the primary. The operation of devices thru a single wire without return was puzzling
at first because of its novelty, but can be readily explained by suitable
analogs. For this purpose reference is made to Figs. 3 and 4.
In the former the low resistance electrical conductors are represented
by pipes of large cross section, the alternator by an oscillating piston
and the filament of an incandescent lamp by a minute channel connecting
the pipes. It will be clear from a glance at the diagram that very slight
excursions of the piston would cause the fluid to rush with high velocity
thru the small channel and that virtually all the energy of movement would
be transformed into heat by friction, similarly to that of the electric
current in the lamp filament.
The second diagram will now be self-explanatory. Corresponding to the
terminal capacity of the electric system an elastic reservoir is employed
which dispenses with the necessity of a return pipe. As the piston
oscillates the bag expands and contracts, and the fluid is made to surge
thru the restricted passage with great speed, this resulting in the
generation of heat as in the incandescent lamp. Theoretically considered,
the efficiency of conversion of energy should be the same in both cases.
Granted, then, that an economic system of power transmission thru a
single wire is practicable, the question arises how to collect the energy
in the receivers. With this object attention is called to Fig. 5, in which
a conductor is shown excited by an oscillator joined to it at one end.
Evidently, as the periodic impulses pass thru the wire, differences of
potential will be created along the same as well as at right angles to it
in the surrounding medium and either of these may be usefully applied.
Thus at a, a circuit comprising an inductance and capacity is resonantly
excited in the transverse, and at b, in the longitudinal sense. At c,
energy is collected in a circuit parallel to the conductor but not in
contact with it, and again at d, in a circuit which is partly sunk into
the conductor and may be, or not, electrically connected to the same. It
is important to keep these typical dispositions in mind, for however the
distant actions of the oscillator might be modified thru the immense
extent of the globe the principles involved are the same.
Consider now the effect of such a conductor of vast dimensions on a
circuit exciting it. The upper diagram of Fig. 6 illustrates a familiar
oscillating system comprising a straight rod of self-inductance 2L with
small terminal capacities cc and a node in the center. In the lower
diagram of the figure a large capacity C is attached to the rod at one end
with the result of shifting the node to the right, thru a distance
corresponding to self-inductance X. As both parts of the system on either
side of the node vibrate at the same rate, we have evidently, (L+X)c =
(L-X)C from which X = L(C-c/C+c). When the capacity C becomes commensurate
to that of the earth, X approximates L, in other words, the node is close
to the ground connection. The exact determination of its position is very
important in the calculation of certain terrestrial electrical and
geodetic data and I have devised special means with this purpose in view.
My original plan of transmitting energy without wires is shown in the
upper diagram of Fig. 7, while the lower one illustrates its mechanical
analog, first published in my article in the Century Magazine of June,
1900. An alternator, preferably of high tension, has one of its terminals
connected to the ground and the other to an elevated capacity and
impresses its oscillations upon the earth. At a distant point
a receiving circuit, likewise connected to ground and to an elevated
capacity, collects some of the energy and actuates a suitable device. I
suggested a multiplication of such units in order to intensify the
effects, an idea which may yet prove valuable. In the analog two tuning
forks are provided, one at the sending and the other at the receiving
station, each having attached to its lower prong a piston fitting in a
cylinder. The two cylinders communicate with a large elastic reservoir
filled with an incompressible fluid. The vibrations transmitted to either
of the tuning forks excite them by resonance and, thru electrical contacts
or otherwise, bring about the desired result. This, I may say, was not a
mere mechanical illustration, but a simple representation of my apparatus
for submarine signaling, perfected by me in 1892, but not appreciated at
that time, altho more efficient than the instruments now in use. The electric diagram in Fig. 7, which was reproduced from my lecture,
was meant only for the exposition of the principle. The arrangement, as I
described it in detail, is shown in Fig. 8. In this case an alternator
energizes the primary of a transformer, the high tension secondary of
which is connected to the ground and an elevated capacity and tuned to the
imprest oscillations. The receiving circuit consists of an inductance
connected to the ground and to an elevated terminal without break and is
resonantly responsive to the transmitted oscillations. A specific form of
receiving device was not mentioned, but I had in mind to transform the
received currents and thus make their volume and tension suitable for any
purpose. This, in substance, is the system of today and I am not aware of
a single authenticated instance of successful transmission at considerable
distance by different instrumentalities. It might, perhaps, not be clear
to those who have perused my first description of these improvements that,
besides making known new and efficient types of apparatus, I gave to the
world a wireless system of potentialities far beyond anything before
conceived. I made explicit and repeated statements that I contemplated
transmission, absolutely unlimited as to terrestrial distance and amount
of energy. But, altho I have overcome all obstacles which seemed in the
beginning unsurmountable and found elegant solutions of all the problems
which confronted me, yet, even at this very day, the majority of experts
are still blind to the possibilities which are within easy attainment. My confidence that a signal could be easily flashed around the globe
was strengthened thru the discovery of the "rotating brush," a wonderful
phenomenon which I have fully described in my address before the
Institution of Electrical Engineers, London, in 1892 [Experiments with
Alternate Currents of High Potential and High Frequency], and which is
illustrated in Fig. 9. This is undoubtedly the most delicate wireless
detector known, but for a long time it was hard to produce and to maintain
in the sensitive state. These difficulties do not exist now and I am
looking to valuable applications of this device, particularly in
connection with the high-speed photographic method, which I suggested, in
wireless, as well as in wire, transmission.
Possibly the most important advances during the following three or four years were my system of concatenated tuned circuits and methods of regulation, now universally adopted. The intimate bearing of these inventions on the development of the wireless art will appear from Fig. 10, which illustrates an arrangement described in my U.S. Patent No. 568,178 of September 22, 1896, and corresponding dispositions of wireless apparatus. The captions of the individual diagrams are thought sufficiently explicit to dispense with further comment. I will merely remark that in this early record, in addition to indicating how any number of resonant circuits may be linked and regulated, I have shown the advantage of the proper timing of primary impulses and use of harmonics. In a farcical wireless suit in London, some engineers, reckless of their reputation, have claimed that my circuits were not at all attuned; in fact they asserted that I had looked upon resonance as a sort of wild and untamable beast! It will be of interest to compare my system as first described in a
Belgian patent of 1897 with the Hertz-wave system of that period. The
significant differences between them will be observed at a glance. The
first enables us to transmit economically energy to any distance and is of
inestimable value; the latter is capable of a radius of only a few miles
and is worthless. In the first there are no spark-gaps and the actions are
enormously magnified by resonance. In both transmitter and receiver the
currents are transformed and rendered more effective and suitable for the
operation of any desired device. Properly constructed, my system is safe
against static and other interference and the amount of energy which may
be transmitted is billions of times greater than with the Hertzian which
has none of these virtues, has never been used successfully and of which
no trace can be found at present.
A well-advertised expert gave out a statement in 1899 that my apparatus
did not work and that it would take 200 years before a message would be
flashed across the Atlantic and even accepted stolidly my congratulations
on a supposed great feat. But subsequent examination of the records showed
that my devices were secretly used all the time and ever since I learned
of this I have treated these Borgia-Medici methods with the contempt in
which they are held by all fair-minded men. The wholesale appropriation of
my inventions was, however, not always without a diverting side. As an
example to the point I may mention my oscillation transformer operating
with an air gap. This was in turn replaced by a carbon arc, quenched gap,
an atmosphere of hydrogen, argon or helium, by a mechanical break with
oppositely rotating members, a mercury interrupter or some kind of a
vacuum bulb and by such tours de force as many new "systems" have been
produced. I refer to this of course, without the slightest ill-feeling,
let us advance by all means. But I cannot help thinking how much better it
would have been if the ingenious men, who have originated these "systems,"
had invented something of their own instead of depending on me altogether.
Before 1900 two most valuable improvements were made. One of these was
my individualized system with transmitters emitting a wave-complex and
receivers comprising separate tuned elements cooperatively associated. The
underlying principle can be explained in a few words. Suppose that there
are n simple vibrations suitable for use in wireless transmission, the
probability that any one tune will be struck by an extraneous disturbance
is 1/n. There will then remain n-1 vibrations and the chance that one of
these will be excited is 1/n-1 hence the probability that two tunes would
be struck at the same time is 1/n(n-1). Similarly, for a combination of
three the chance will be 1/n(n-1)(n-2) and so on. It will be readily seen
that in this manner any desired degree of safety against the statics or
other kind of disturbance can be attained provided the receiving apparatus
is so designed that is operation is possible only thru the joint action of
all the tuned elements. This was a difficult problem which I have
successfully solved so that now any desired number of simultaneous
messages is practicable in the transmission thru the earth as well as thru
artificial conductors.
The other invention, of still greater importance, is a peculiar oscillator enabling the transmission of energy without wires in any quantity that may ever be required for industrial use, to any distance, and with very high economy. It was the outcome of years of systematic study and investigation and wonders will be achieved by its means. The prevailing misconception of the mechanism involved in the wireless transmission has been responsible for various unwarranted announcements which have misled the public and worked harm. By keeping steadily in mind that the transmission thru the earth is in every respect identical to that thru a straight wire, one will gain a clear understanding of the phenomena and will be able to judge correctly the merits of a new scheme. Without wishing to detract from the value of any plan that has been put forward I may say that they are devoid of novelty. So for instance in Fig. 12 arrangements of transmitting and receiving circuits are illustrated, which I have described in my U.S. Patent No. 613,809 of November 8, 1898 on a Method of and Apparatus for Controlling Mechanism of Moving Vessels or Vehicles, and which have been recently dished up as original discoveries. In other patents and technical publications I have suggested conductors in the ground as one of the obvious modifications indicated in Fig. 5. For the same reason the statics are still the bane of the wireless.
There is about as much virtue in the remedies recently proposed as in hair
restorers. A small and compact apparatus has been produced which does away
entirely with this trouble, at least in plants suitably remodeled.
Nothing is more important in the present phase of development of the
wireless art than to dispose of the dominating erroneous ideas. With this
object I shall advance a few arguments based on my own observations which
prove that Hertz waves have little to do with the results obtained even at
small distances.
In Fig. 13 a transmitter is shown radiating space waves of considerable
frequency. It is generally believed that these waves pass along the
earth's surface and thus affect the receivers. I can hardly think of
anything more improbable than this "gliding wave" theory and the
conception of the "guided wireless" which are contrary to all laws of
action and reaction. Why should these disturbances cling to a conductor
where they are counteracted by induced currents, when they can propagate
in all other directions unimpeded? The fact is that the radiations of the
transmitter passing along the earth's surface are soon extinguished, the
height of, the inactive zone indicated in the diagram, being some
function of the wave length, the bulk of the waves traversing freely the
atmosphere. Terrestrial phenomena which I have noted conclusively show
that there is no Heaviside layer, or if it exists, it is of no effect. It
certainly would be unfortunate if the human race were thus imprisoned and
forever without power to reach out into the depths of space.
The actions at a distance cannot be proportionate to the height of the
antenna and the current in the same. I shall endeavor to make this clear
by reference to diagram in Fig. 14. The elevated terminal charged to a
high potential induces an equal and opposite charge in the earth and there
are thus Q lines giving an average current I=4Qn which circulates locally
and is useless except that it adds to the momentum. A relatively small
number of lines q however, go off to great distance and to these
corresponds a mean current of ie = 4qn to which is due the action at a
distance. The total average current in the antenna is thus Im = 4Qn + 4qn
and its intensity is no criterion for the performance. The electric
efficiency of the antenna is q/Q+q and this is often a very small
fraction.
Dr. L. W. Austin and Mr. J. L. Hogan have made quantitative
measurements which are valuable, but far from supporting the Hertz wave
theory they are evidences in disproval of the same, as will be easily
perceived by taking the above facts into consideration. Dr. Austin's
researches are especially useful and instructive and I regret that I
cannot agree with him on this subject. I do not think that if his receiver
was affected by Hertz waves he could ever establish such relations as he
has found, but he would be likely to reach these results if the Hertz
waves were in a large part eliminated. At great distance the space waves
and the current waves are of equal energy, the former being merely an
accompanying manifestation of the latter in accordance with the
fundamental teachings of Maxwell.
It occurs to me here to ask the question—why have the Hertz waves,
been reduced from the original frequencies to those I have advocated for
my system, when in so doing the activity of the transmitting apparatus has
been reduced a billion fold? I can invite any expert to perform an
experiment such as is illustrated in Fig. 15, which shows the classical
Hertz oscillator altho we may have in the Hertz oscillator an activity
thousands of times greater, the effect on the receiver is not to be
compared to that of the grounded circuit. This shows that in the
transmission from an airplane we are merely working thru a condenser, the
capacity of which is a function of a logarithmic ratio between the length
of the conductor and the distance from the ground. The receiver is
affected in exactly the same manner as from an ordinary transmitter, the
only difference being that there is a certain modification of the action
which can be predetermined from the electrical constants. It is not at all
difficult to maintain communication between an airplane and a station on
the ground, on the contrary, the feat is very easy.
To mention another experiment in support of my view, I may refer to
Fig. 16 in which two grounded circuits are shown excited by oscillations
of the Hertzian order. It will be found that the antennas can be put out
of parallelism without noticeable change in the action on the receiver,
this proving that it is due to currents propagated thru the ground and not
to space waves.
Particularly significant are the results obtained in cases illustrated
in Figures 17 and 18. In the former an obstacle is shown in the path of
the waves but unless the receiver is within the effective electrostatic
influence of the mountain range, the signals are not appreciably weakened
by the presence of the latter, because the currents pass under it and
excite the circuit in the same way as if it were attached to an energized
wire. If, as in Fig. 18, a second range happens to be beyond the receiver,
it could only strengthen the Hertz wave effect by reflection, but as a
matter of fact it detracts greatly from the intensity of the received
impulses because the electric niveau between the mountains is raised, as I
have explained with my lightning protector in the E Fig. 17. Illustrating Influence of Obstacle In the Path of Transmission as Evidence Against the Hertz-wave Theory.
Again in Fig. 19 two transmitting circuits, one grounded directly and the other thru an air gap are shown. It is a common observation that the former is far more effective, which could not be the case with Hertz radiations. In a like manner if two grounded circuits are observed from day to day the effect is found to increase greatly with the dampness of the ground, and for the same reason also the transmission thru sea-water is more efficient.
An illuminating experiment is indicated in Fig. 20 in which two grounded transmitters are shown, one with a large and the other with a small terminal capacity. Suppose that the latter be 1/10 of the former but that it is charged to 10 times the potential and let the frequency of the two circuits and therefore the currents in both antennas be exactly the same. The circuit with the smaller capacity will then have 10 times the energy of the other but the effects on the receiver will be in no wise proportionate.
The same conclusions will be reached by transmitting and receiving circuits with wires buried underground. In each case the actions carefully investigated will be found to be due to earth currents. Numerous other proofs might be cited which can be easily verified. So for example oscillations of low frequency are ever so much more effective in the transmission which is inconsistent with the prevailing idea. My observations in 1900 and the recent transmissions of signals to very great distances are another emphatic disproval. The Hertz wave theory of wireless transmission may be kept up for a while, but I do not hesitate to say that in a short time it will be recognized as one of the most remarkable and inexplicable aberrations of the scientific mind which has ever been recorded in history. |
||||||
|
|
|
Home
| Tesla
Writings | Tesla Patents
| Tesla FAQ | Tesla
On AC |
Tesla
Books | Glossary
| Links |
|
|
|
21st Century
Books © 1998-2013 Twenty-First
Century Books, Colorado
|