Showing posts with label Marconi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marconi. Show all posts

June 2 - News on Wires and Wireless Day

Posted on June 2, 2021

 

This is an update of my post published on June 2, 2010:

On this day in 1875, Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson first transmitted sound over wires. Watson twanged a spring near one device, and Bell heard it through the other device. It took about nine more months for the two to create that more famous first—transmitting understandable words through the world's first telephone.




On this day in 1896, Guglielmo Marconi obtained his first radio patent in England. It was termed a wireless telegraphy apparatus.

The first half of the 1800s had seen a revolution in communication through electricity: the invention and improvement of the telegraph. The telegraph required wires for the message to travel across, and it also required trained operators who could translate messages into Morse Code (and Morse Code back into messages).


In the later half of the 1800s, many people continued to work with electricity and communications. Bell's and Watson's telephone was an improvement over the telegraph in that translators and codes were not required. Marconi's radio was an improvement in that no wires were needed.

Of course, we now have wireless networks and satellite communication – with the internet and cellular phones making communications worldwide much faster, cheaper, and more reliable than ever before. And people are still working on making our newest systems even better.



Did you know...?

Marconi did not discover any new principles or hatch any new ideas in his successful radio device. Instead, he improved and combined components others had already invented, adapting them to his system.

Bell was very interested in sound partly because of his mother's gradual deafness, which began when he was just12 years old.

Marconi was born and died in Italy, although he did much of his work in England and some in the U.S.

Bell was born in Scotland, moved to Canada, and did much of his work in the U.S.

Marconi's “marvelous invention” was given credit by some for the rescue of the survivors of the Titanic, because wireless technology was used by the Titanic, the rescue ship Carpathia, and Marconi International Marine Communication Company.

Bell decided that his most famous invention was a source of unwanted interruption, and he wouldn't allow a telephone to be installed in his study.

Explore Some More

The classic soup-can-and-string telephone can help us understand how early telephones worked.

Little kids might need to practice learning phone numbers (including emergency phone numbers such as 9-1-1). This DLTK worksheet can help.

Read more about the history of radios here.

People still build their own crystal radios! Remember, radio can be a two-way communication device (like ham radios and the radios used by police and boats) as well as the more familiar one-way device (tuning into commercial radio transmissions).

 


Here are some directions for building a crystal radio receiver.

There are broadcast and Internet radio stations meant just for kids. Pandora delivers six different kids' stations!

Here's a fairly simple explanation of how radios work.


Also on this date:













Clean Air Day in Canada
(First Wednesday in June)






Plan ahead:


 



June 2, 2010

News on Wires and Wireless Day

On this day in 1875, Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas A. Watson first transmitted sound over wires. Watson twanged a spring near one device, and Bell heard it through the other device. It took about nine more months for the two to create that more famous first—transmitting understandable words through the world's first telephone.


On this day in 1896, Guglielmo Marconi obtained his first radio patent in England. It was termed a wireless telegraphy apparatus.



The first half of the 1800s had seen a revolution in communication through electricity: the invention and improvement of the telegraph. The telegraph required wires for the message to travel across, and it also required trained operators who could translate messages into Morse Code (and Morse Code back into messages).


In the later half of the 1800s, many people continued to work with electricity and communications. Bell's and Watson's telephone was an improvement over the telegraph in that translators and codes were not required. Marconi's radio was an improvement in that no wires were needed.

Of course, we now have wireless networks and satellite communication – with the internet and cellular phones making communications worldwide much faster, cheaper, and more reliable than ever before. And people are still working on making our newest systems even better.


Did you know...?
  • Marconi did not discover any new principles or hatch any new ideas in his successful radio device. Instead, he improved and combined components others had already invented, adapting them to his system.
  • Bell was very interested in sound partly because of his mother's gradual deafness, which began when he was just12 years old.
  • Marconi was born and died in Italy, although he did much of his work in England and some in the U.S.
  • Bell was born in Scotland, moved to Canada, and did much of his work in the U.S.
  • Marconi's “marvelous invention” was given credit by some for the rescue of the survivors of the Titanic, because wireless technology was used by the Titanic, the rescue ship Carpathia, and Marconi International Marine Communication Company.
  • Bell decided that his most famous invention was a source of unwanted interruption, and he wouldn't allow a telephone to be installed in his study.
Explore Some More
  • Little kids need to practice learning phone numbers (including emergency phone numbers such as 9-1-1). This DLTK worksheet can help.
  • Read more about the history of the telephone here.
  • People still build their own crystal radios! Remember, radio can be a two-way communication device (like ham radios and the radios used by police and boats) as well as the more familiar one-way device (tuning into commercial radio transmissions).
Here are some directions for building a crystal radio receiver.
  • There are lots of radio stations meant just for kids. Radio Disney may be one of the most popular.
  • Here's a fairly simple explanation of how radios work.

December 12, 2009

First trans-Atlantic radio transmission

On this day in 1901, Italian inventor Guglielmo Marconi made an important experiment in a whole series of experiments to make his wireless communication device practical.


Ever since 1893, Nikola Tesla and
Marconi had (separately) been inventing and reinventing the radio, but the devices, which were called “wireless telegraph,” still could not send music and speech. Instead, they sent signals such as Morse Code. Some people said that radio would never be able to compete with telegraphy (which involves Morse Code signals sent along wires) because radio waves could only be transmitted along line-of-sight and at limited distances.

That's one reason the December 12th experiment was important; Marconi showed that a radio transmission from a high-power station could be detected as far away as 3,500 km (2,200 miles).

It would be another five years before the first true AM radio messages—speech and music!—would be made.

What is radio?

Radio waves are just like light, but with slower frequency and much longer wavelengths.

A radio is basically an antenna to catch radio waves, some electronics to turn the waves ba
ck into sounds, and a loudspeaker so we can hear the sounds.

Einstein explained radio this way:
“You see, wire telegraph is a kind of very, very long cat. You pull his tail in New York, and his head is meowing in Los Angeles. Do you understand this? And radio operates in the same way: You send signals here; they receive them there. The only difference is that there is no cat."
Here is a nice explanation of how radio works.
And here is a 1937 short
movie on the same topic.

Are radios still being invented and reinvented?

Remember, invention goes on even for devices that work pretty well, because people can think of ways to make things smaller / bigger / faster / cheaper, and so forth. Right now the biggest thing in radio is probably satellite radio, which is like satellite TV. Sirius users in the U.S. can get their favorite sat radio stations everywhere they go, as long as they have a clear view of the satellites. They get a choice of more than 150 stations, and many of the stations are commercial-free. Users do have to pay a subscription for the service, of course (again, like satellite TV).


Kids' Music on Kids' Radio

Find a station near you here.

Cosmic Radio
Did you know that stars, pulsars, nebulae, and galaxies emit radio waves?

Our huge, dishlike radio antennae not only collect our own radio waves from satellites, but al
so collect natural, random-sounding hisses from all over the sky. We can learn a lot about astronomical objects using an array of radio telescopes.

Here's something weird to think about:

We have been sending radio and television transmissions out into space for more than 100 years. So it is possible that any aliens who live within 100 light years of is have detected those signals and are, perhaps, learning our languages, enjoying our old shows (do aliens love Lucy, too?), or shrugging in bewilderment over our rock-n-roll.


What would aliens think about humans from listening to and watching our current radio and TV?