Radio
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Radio
can refer to either the electronic appliance that we listen with or the content
listened to. However, it all started with the discovery of "radio
waves" - electromagnetic waves that have the capacity to transmit music,
speech, pictures and other data invisibly through the air. Many devices work by
using electromagnetic waves including: radio, microwaves, cordless phones,
remote controlled toys, television broadcasts, and more.
The Roots of Radio
During the 1860s, Scottish physicist, James Clerk Maxwell
predicted the existence of radio waves; and in 1886, German physicist, Heinrich
Rudolph Hertz demonstrated that rapid variations of electric
current could be projected into space in the form of radio waves similar to
those of light and heat.
In
1866, Mahlon Loomis,
an American dentist, successfully demonstrated "wireless telegraphy."
Loomis was able to make a meter connected to one kite cause another one to
move, marking the first known instance of wireless aerial communication.
Guglielmo Marconi
Guglielmo Marconi,
an Italian inventor, proved the feasibility of radio communication. He sent and
received his first radio signal in Italy in 1895. By 1899 he flashed the first
wireless signal across the English Channel and two years later received the
letter "S", telegraphed from England to Newfoundland. This was the
first successful transatlantic radiotelegraph message in 1902.
Nikola Tesla
In addition to Marconi, two of his
contemporaries Nikola Tesla and Nathan Stufflefield took out patents for
wireless radio transmitters. Nikola Tesla
is now credited with being the first person to patent radio technology; the
Supreme Court overturned Marconi's patent in 1943 in favor of Tesla.
Growth of Radio - Radiotelegraph and Spark-Gap Transmitters
Radio-telegraphy is the sending by radio waves
the same dot-dash message (morse code) used in a telegraph.
Transmitters at that time were called spark-gap machines. It was developed
mainly for ship-to-shore and ship-to-ship communication. This was a way of
communicating between two points, however, it was not public radio broadcasting
as we know it today.
Wireless
signals proved effective in communication for rescue work when a sea disaster
occurred. A number of ocean liners installed wireless equipment. In 1899 the
United States Army established wireless communications with a lightship off
Fire Island, New York. Two years later the Navy adopted a wireless system. Up
to then, the Navy had been using visual signaling and homing pigeons for
communication.
In
1901, radiotelegraph service was instituted between five Hawaiian Islands. By
1903, a Marconi station located in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, carried an
exchange or greetings between President Theodore Roosevelt and King Edward VII.
In 1905 the naval battle of Port Arthur in the Russo-Japanese war was reported
by wireless, and in 1906 the U.S. Weather Bureau experimented with
radiotelegraphy to speed notice of weather conditions.
In
1909, Robert E. Peary, arctic explorer, radiotelegraphed: "I found the
Pole". In 1910 Marconi opened regular American-European radiotelegraph
service, which several months later, enabled an escaped British murderer to be
apprehended on the high seas. In 1912, the first transpacific radiotelegraph
service linked San Francisco with Hawaii.
Improvements to Radio Transmitters
Overseas radiotelegraph service developed
slowly, primarily because the initial
radiotelegraph transmitter discharged
electricity within the circuit and between the electrodes was unstable causing
a high amount of interference. The Alexanderson
high-frequency alternator and the De Forest
tube resolved many of these early technical problems.
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Lee DeForest - AM Radio
Lee Deforest
invented space telegraphy, the triode amplifier and the Audion. In the early
1900s, the great requirement for further development of radio was an efficient
and delicate detector of electromagnetic radiation. Lee De Forest provided that
detector. It made it possible to amplify the radio frequency signal picked up
by the antenna before application to the receiver detector; thus, much weaker
signals could be utilized than had previously been possible. De Forest was also
the person who first used the word "radio".
The
result of Lee DeForest's work was the invention of amplitude-modulated or AM
radio that allowed for a multitude of radio stations. The earlier spark-gap
transmitters did not allow for this.
Military Use and Patent Control
When the United States entered the first world
war in 1917, all radio development was controlled by the U.S. Navy to prevent
its possible use by enemy spies. The U.S. government took over control of all
patents related to radio technology.
In
1919, after the government released its control of all patents, the Radio
Corporation of America (RCA) was established with the purpose of distributing
control of the radio patents that had been restricted during the war.
Radio Speaks
The first time the human voice was transmitted
by radio is debateable. Claims to that distinction range from the phase,
"Hello Rainey" spoken by Natan B. Stubblefield to a test partner near
Murray, Kentucky, in 1892, to an experimental program of talk and music by Reginald A. Fessenden,
in 1906, which was heard by radio-equipped ships within several hundred miles.
Reginald A. Fessenden
Canadian, Reginald A. Fessenden
is best known for his invention of the modulation of radio waves and the
fathometer. Fessenden worked as as a chemist for Thomas Edison during the 1880s
and later for Westinghouse. Fessenden started his own company where he invented
the modulation of radio waves, the "heterodyne principle" which
allowed the reception and transmission on the same aerial without interference.
True Broadcasting Begins
In 1915, speech was first transmitted across the
continent from New York City to San Francisco and across the Atlantic Ocean
from Naval radio station NAA at Arlington, Virginia, to the Eiffel Tower
in Paris.
On
November 2, 1920, Westinghouse's KDKA-Pittsburgh broadcast the Harding-Cox
election returns and began a daily schedule of radio programs.
The
first ship-to-shore two way radio conversation occurred in 1922, between Deal
Beach, New Jersey, and the S.S. America, 400 miles at sea. However, it was not
until 1929 that high seas public radiotelephone service was inaugurated. At
that time telephone contact could be made only with ships within 1,500 miles of
shore. Today there is the ability to telephone nearly every large ship wherever
it may be on the globe.
Commercial
radiotelephony linking North America with Europe was opened in 1927, and with
South America three years later. In 1935 the first telephone call was made
around the world, using a combination of wire and radio circuits.
FM Radio
Edwin Howard Armstrong
invented frequency-modulated or FM radio in 1933. FM improved the audio signal
of radio by controlling the noise static caused by electrical equipment and the
earth's atmosphe. Until 1936, all American transatlantic telephone
communication had to be routed through England. In that year, a direct
radiotelephone circuit was opened to Paris. Telephone connection by radio and
cable is now accessible with 187 foreign points.
Radio
technology has grown significantly since its early development. In 1947, Bell
Labs scientists invented the transistor.
In 1954, a then small Japanese company called Sony introduced the transistor
radio.
FM Antenna System
In
1965, the first Master FM Antenna system in the world designed to allow individual FM
stations to broadcast simultaneously from one source was erected on the Empire
State Building in NYC.
Source:
Link:
http://inventors.about.com/od/rstartinventions/a/radio_2.htm
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