NIKOLA TESLA: LECTURE BEFORE THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES - April 6, 1897 Leland I. Anderson, Editor TWENTY FIRST CENTURY BOOKS BRECKENRIDGE, COLORADO NIKOLA TESLA: THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 6, 1897 Nikola Tesla International TelecommWlications Union NIKOLA'TESLA: BEFORE THE NEW YORK ACAD8v1Y OF The Streams oHenard and Roentgen and l\!ovel Apparatus lOr Their Prcxiuction April 1897 Reconstructed Leland 1. Anderson, Editor 1994 TWENTY ARST CENTURY BOOKS BRECKEI\lRJOOE. COLORAOO Copyright © Leland Anderson All rights reserved. No p'dlt of this book may be reproduced in any fonn or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photOCOpying, recording, or by any mfOrmatIon storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher, of ,,--,ll.;UV:': Card Number: 94-61004 ISBN 0-9636012-1-0(hardcover) 0-9636012-7-X (soft cover) First Century Books P.O. Box 2001 Breckenridge, Colorado 80424 Contents Figures vii Editorial viii ix Introduction xiii Setting 1 on non-publication of 3 Lecture Commentary 7 High frequency apparatus 7 Lenard Roentgen 18 actions from Lenard and Roentgen 26 The I - 29 Improved Apparatus for the Production of Powerful Electrical Vibrations; Novel Frequency Measurement Methods. Section I Addendum 71 Wireless Telegraphy Receiving Methods. Section II The Hurtful "\.-ClIVlli> of 83 Roentgen ""'''''''''Vll III The Source of "-'V''''''L)::;''H and 95 Con- Appendix 109 Contemporary reviews of lecture III Acknowledgments 117 VI CONTENTS Sponsorship 118 Index 121 vii Figures Form of listing: Sec. !f.-Fig. If LC I-I 1-2 1-3 1-4 1-5 1-6 1-7 1-8 1-9 1-10 !- I I 1-12 1-13 1-14 IA-I5 IA-16 IA-17 IA-18 IA- 111- 1lJ-2 111-3 111-4 node in circuit) 14 Method of transformation of electrical energy by oscil- 34 latory condenser discharges Mechanical of electrical oscillator 35 illustrated in I with self-induction coil 37 Coil wound to secure increased r.,,,,,,r:lfv 37 a secondary coil with a primary circuit coil 38 System for existing circuits 38 Circuit controller allowing condensers connected to dis- 39 charge circuit and ~ll<~~~~~.v~1 H"'5"""v"" of parts and circuits of a small oscillator 39 of small oscillator diagrammatically shown 41 8 Apparatus for the manufacture of condensers and coils 46 High potential coil system having terminals at centers 48 Photograph of coil system illustrated in II in action 52 instrument to determine and phase 62 Method of impulse illumination of instrument disk 67 Devices for '72 Other ways of 73 interrupter) 74 74 (A series of six photographs of drawings of 120 bulbs exhibited on walls of New York Academy of 76-81 Illustrating an experiment the rays the real source of 97 Improved Lenard tube 102 arrangement with improved double-focus 103 tube for reducing actions Illustrating arrangement with a Lenard lube for safe 106 working at close range viii Editorial Remarks Section I of this lecture is presented with few changes from the original text by Tesla, an illustration of which is reproduced on page 30. The text would have benefited an editor's hand if presented to a publisher at that but no such editorial "smoothing" has been attempted in presentation now. Only minor changes have been intro- duced, such as in words that were separated before the turn of the century but now appear solid. They are: electro- magnetic, electro-motive, in as much, foil, wave length. few articles and prepositions were missing, and their have set in brackets []. As an additional to the reader, certain items have been marked brackets with an explanation provided in a note. figures 13 ab, 14, and 16, together with the photographs of drawings of 120 bulbs 76-81, have Section I appeared among a group of papers passed on to children by George Scherff, who was Tesla's personal secretary, business manager, and confidant from 1895 through A also in the archives of Tesla Museum copies, were mISSIng some illustration drawings and photographs. These were drawn from the archives of Knight Brothers and Boyle Anderson. Preface Nikola Tesla was born of parents at Smiljan, the Austro-Hungarian border province of Lika, now part of Croatia, at midnight July 9-10, 1856. His father, Milutin, was a Serbian Orthodox priest, and mother, nee Djouka Mandie, was a family line whose sons were the clergy and whose daughters were wives of the clergy. Serbian Orthodox church then used the Julian calendar, and it con- tinues to use this today for days observance. The American colonies converted to the Gregorian calendar years before arrived at York in 1884. When crossed 'date ' 11 days dropped his per- sonal calendar. Most institutions observe Tesla's birth date as 10, which date held for himself, but if the tolling church Lika could have heard in Ameri- ca when Tesla was born, the calendar date would have been July 21, Establishing himself in United States, became a in 1891. brought to the world great' gifts for which he induction motor and the multi-phase alternating current power distribution system driving it (1888); the fundamental system wireless raphy embodying "Tesla coil" ( (1898); the Tesla turbine (1913-20), which attracting great interest; and, among many leading inventive achieve- VTOL (1928). * The Tesla family moved to nearby when Nikola reached the age of six to enter school. Adding to the uncertainty of the date accord- ed Tesla's birth is an official certificate of birth entered for him by the city Gospic his birth date as June 1856. certificate is reproduced in Nikola Tesla: with Relatives (Bel- grade: Nikola Tesla Museum, 1993; in Serbian and English), illus. sec. I thank Milan Radovic, of Wisconsin-Madison Li- braries. for translating this ~'61HH',all' x PREFACE 50 following the presentation of the principles wireless telegraphy now called at his in Teslaasserted inventive claim. It wasn't until five months following death in 1943 that the United Supreme court declared the basic radio patent Marconi in- valid, the prior art of Tesia for system con- cept and apparatus, Stone the method of selectivity, and Lodge variable tuning. In his lifetime, Tesla was granted over 30 honorary degrees and foundation medals from the world over. The unit magnetic flux density in the MKS system was named "tesla" on the occasion of the centennial year of his birth. The only other to share such recognition is Joseph The 1897 lecture before the New York Academy of Sciences was the sixth historic lectures delivered in rapid succes- sion in America and in The previous five lectures were: of Alternate-Current Motors," May 16, of the American Institute Elec- in New York followed by the trio series of demonstration lectures on high frequency and high potential alternating currents, the first,"Experiments with Alternate Current of Very High Frequency and Their Application to Methods of Illumination," May 20, 1891, before a meeting of the New York City; the second, "Experiments with Alternate Currents of High Potential and High Frequency," February 3, 1892, before the Institution of Electrical Engineers, London, followed a day (with some condensation) by special request at the Royal Institution, and by invitation, February 19, be- fore the Societe Internationale des Electriciens and the So- ciete Francaise Physique; and the third, "On and Other Phenomena," February 24, 1 before Institute Philadelphia and (with some variation) March 1, before a meeting of the Nation- al Electric Light Association in St. Louis (it was in the latter that the principles of radio commUnI- cation were first presented); and and cal Oscillators," August 25, 1893, a meeting of the PREFACE xi International Congress at the Columbian Exposi- tion in Chicago, and (with some variation) November before a meeting the New York Electrical """'1-"" delivered four additional ''''''''.'Ull,,"' lectures or in absentia, the last in 1911. --e Introduction There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy. Hamlet, Act I, Scene 5 In 1895, the fluorescent coating of a cardboard screen offered just enough illumination for Professor Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen to find his way to the discovery of the X ray. The implications of his discovery for the medical profession were, of course, no less than staggering. Yet history has shown that its implications for the world of physics were more far-reaching than anyone could have imagined. At the time of Roentgen's discovery, many scientists were quite comfortable with the Newtonian explanation of the way the universe worked and even discouraged students from pursuing careers in physics because, as they thought, physics offered little career potential: almost everything already had been explained! A few notable exceptions, among them black-body radiation and the Michelson-Morley experiment, challenged the neat and simple explanations of Newtonian physics, but the world of science was confident that these phenomena soon would be understood. The nature of light and electricity (ether waves vs. radiant matter) and the structure of the atom were still in the question-forming stage. Roentgen's discovery of the X ray signaled the end of two centuries' confidence in Newtonian physics. With little reservation, the discovery of the X ray can be considered the birth of modern physics. Where, boundless nature, can I hold you fast? Faust, 455 The trail leading to the discovery of Roentgen's invisible light began in the seventeenth century with two chance observations of visible light: Von Guericke noting that a xiv INfRODUCl'ION faint glow occurred between his hand a spinning sulfur ball Piccard finding that light is from mercury sloshing around the top a barometer. By the early eigh- teenth Hawksbee, knowing that a vacuum had been present in upper part of Piccard's barometer, constructed glass vessels removing some the air. He excited them with frictional electricity and observed beautiful glowing streams of colored light. Almost a century and a half passed before the real significance of this accelerated would begin to be The 1790 introduction of Volta's electric battery allowed Oersted, Ampere, Faraday, and Henry to deduce the rela- tionship between electricity and magnetism. Page Rhumkorff induction the high voltage transformers, which could increase the few volts from a bat- tery to many thousands volts. In the Geissler veloped an efficient vacuum pump, similar to Piccard's which employed the weight of to pull the air out of a glass a glass blower, fabri- cated many types of tubes, evacuated them using his own new pump, and watched them glow with beautiful col- ors when high voltage from induction coils was applied. Variations in the composition, the kind of gas, and the level of vacuum were used to expand the multicolor effects of Geissler tubes. equipment improved, higher vacuums were attained; PlUcker, Hittorff, and Crookes observed streams of light emanating from the negative electrode of some of their dis- charge tubes. Furthermore, a magnet was seen to bend and deflect this stream, called the cathode ray. Crookes, Gold- stein, and Perrin designed many variations of vacuum charge most of which demonstrated new of cathode ray. Magnetic-effect, paddle-wheel, and canal-ray tubes were only a few of such types. In the nineteenth century, true nature of cathode was a subject of much controversy. In 1803, Thomas Young showed that light had a wave nature and many scientists assumed that cathodic light (one name given to cathode rays) was just another light wave traveling in the ether. However, Crookes, among others, saw cathode ray as a INfRODUCTION xv stream of matter particles which termed "radiant matter." In 1890, constructed an in which cathode were found to exit a through a thin aluminum His untimely death In left his student, with task of continuing their experiments. Lenard Roentgen to repeat some of the experiments that Hertz he had conducted and pre- sented Roentgen wi th some with which to accom- plish them. many scientists of his day, Roentgen focused on the cathode ray. On the evening of November 1895, he carefully covered a discharge tube with a black cardboard to prevent the light in tube from with his gation. Immediately upon energizing the Roentgen no- ticed a greenish glow emanating from a nearby cardboard screen that been with a chemical compound known to in the of cathode rays. Cathode rays had never been known to journey more than a cen- from rnA',,,,,,",," tube, and the cardboard screen was more than a distance from tube, Roentgen concluded that the glow he was the feet of a new kind of During the course of further "-""'V", Roentgen to his to as he held sman lead fishing in front the dis- tube: shadow the bones in his were cast on the fluorescent cardboard. The discovery was made. Given certainty that rays were being produced in quantities by the discharge tubes in use at the time, X rays might have discovered by any number of scientists during the pre- vious several decades. Rather than diminishing Roentgen's achievement, however, this it considerably, demonstrating not only genius in what was happening but his in stopping to On December 28, 1895, Roentgen published about copies of preliminary paper and distributed them to local colleagues in Bavaria. Early in he made an- nouncement to rest of the world. The of living bones tissues their bodies was disconcerting to most people, to say the xvi INTRODUCTION A New Jersey proposed a bill to outlaw the mak- ing of opera glasses, while a manufacturer offered X-ray-proof undergarments. In Roentgen's own culture, the sight of bones presaged imminent death, and Roentgen's wife was horrified by the in hand. Obviously, the most immediate application of the new covery was in medical world, and medical practitioners, scientists, and instrument companies any information they could get. Crookes-type vacuum discharge tubes and induction coils were not easy to find outside of university physics laboratories. A Boston dentist, William 1. Morton, actually made use of a simple light bulb connected to a bor- rowed induction coil to produce some the first X-ray ages in the United On 11, 1896, the New York Electrical Review answered the for information about X rays by launching a of eight by Niko- la in which he presented many new ideas, inventions, and dealing with the ray, its production, use, and explanation. The What is the craze, The town's ablaze With the new phase of ways. Wilhelmina Electrical Review (London) 17, 1896 Anderson's reconstruction of Tesla's lecture before the New York Academy of on April 6, is a most portant contribution. In this Tesla went beyond his titled "The Streams of and Roentgen Novel for Their Production," and expanded on his X-ray articles published in the York Electrical Re- view. large of his vacuum tubes were displayed on the walls of the halL the tubes re[)re~;entea were not only Crookes and types but va- of single-electrode tubes of Tesla's own invention, some of which were used for his Roentgen-ray demonstra- tions accompanying lecture. INTRODUCTION xvii During lecture, discussed the uses of some of tubes in his experiments with wireless telegraphy. Among his tubes, said, were "a great number of de- "Compare this statement with 1916 re- by Anderson in first book of this series, Nikola On His Work With Alternating Currents: "Well, in some of these bulbs I have shown, for instance, that a heat- conductor a stream or as I said at that charged particles, a few of bulbs have been exactly in the same manner the audion is used today." is prompted to ask, "What was Tesla really in his research and experimentation with vacuum tubes?" His statements about using the tubes in the receiving and detection of wireless offers clues. his ture before the Academy, often referred to Lenard- Roentgen-streams and tubes; obviously considered Lenard and Roentgen to hold equal in the of X The Lenard tube, as well as mentation, were of particular interest to Tesla that '"""'""""'"'" rays (streams electrons) actually emanated from the alu- minum window opposite the cathode of tube and pro- ceeded a centimeters into air. research by Corum and Kenneth Corum indicates that Tes]a was looking for methods of moving electrons with such devices as open-air diodes or even relativistic electron-beam (REB) diodes, which, if as they are built today, including power supply, resemble closely a Tesla coil and a Lenard tube. speculation about Tesla's moving electrons is, perhaps, only the of the story. Other particularly his on particle beam weaponry, points to interest in moving larger Another great value Anderson's contribution in recon- structing this leeture is that it shows us historically the extent of Tesla's work with vacuum tubes up to 1897. Roentgen's announcing the discovery the ray Tesla with yet another area in which to contribute discoveries and inventions. This lecture on the rays Lenard and Roent- and Tesla's series articles in New York Review contain material far more advanced than any other contemporary work. 1897 lecture discussion of "reneeted" Roentgen offered with data tables, xviii INfRODUCTON almost exactly to Arthur H. Compton's 1922 monograph on the topic of secondary radiation. offered a design apparatus to generate "reflected" rays. lecture is a fount of information beyond the knowl- edge of most of his contem}X>raries, a wide array of tables, charts, diagrams, photographs, designs, and suggestions of one process after another for the produc- tion of X rays, the use of vacuum tubes, and special dures for refining the operation of all kinds of apparatus. Tesla, here and in other works, discussed scientific princi- ples not "discovered" until years later. The most significant contribution of this text .rerhaps, that it shows in his true light one of Vlslonanes that ever man far ahead of his peers yet gentle and willing to give what he had to the world. With regard to the relationship between Tesla's work and the world of ",-,<,-,u"," it is curious to note that it has taken a better part of the last 100 years since his invention of the resonant for to truly in duplicating the coil sign, this in spite of the great pains went to in making his recommendations clear. Let us hope that, as more informa- tion on Tesla's work becomes available, much greater atten- tion will be to it, to the betterment of our world. Jim Hardesty Judith Hardesty Ithaca, New York June 1994 cannot help looking at that little bulb of Crookes with a feeling akin to awe, when he considers all that it has done for scientific pro- gress-first, the magnificent wonderful achieve- ments of Roentgen. Possibly it may still contain a grateful Asmodeus, who will be let out of his narrow prison cell by a lucky student. At times it has seemed to me as though I myself heard a whispering voice, and I have searched eagerly among my dusty bulbs and I fear my imagination has deceived me, but there they are still, my dusty bulbs, and I am still listening hope- fully. N, Tesla March 7. 1896 Background Setting 1897 the New Academy of u\./I'",11'-"",,:) did not appear in entirety in Tesla's lifetime. In an extend- ed 1916 interview he remarks, lecture was not published I had to a lot of things. I had undertaken an extensive program, and I found that my energies were not adequate to the task. Later on, the subject was neglected; other business vented me from doing anything It only typewritten form, uncompleted.,,1 original as delivered, carried title, "The Streams Lenard and Roentgen and Novel Apparatus for Production,"2 but actuality it went far beyond that topic. On the walls of the hall Tesla displayed proximately 120 drawings of vacuum tubes that he or- dered built in by his laboratory technicians. Many of these were of Lenard type and also the single- electrode type pioneered by him and used demonstrations of methods in lecture. Among the drawings were tubes wireless telegraphy experiments. The hereto- unpublished portion of the 1897 text cov- ers, with of on X-ray NikoJa TesJa On His Work With Alternating Currents and Their Application to Wireless Telephony, and Transmission of Power (Denver: Sun Publishing, 1992), p. 158. (Editorial) "The New York Academy of Science: An Electrical Exhibition--Address Nikola Tesla announcing recent achievements," Electrical Review (N.Y.), Apr. 14, 1897, p. 175; "Mr. Tesla on Rays," p. 398, and (Review) "Mr. Tesla the New York of "EJectricalEngineer, Apr. 14, 1897, pp. 400-401; the latter was published under the title, "Mr. Tesla on X Rays," in the Electrical Review (London) May 7, I p, 626. See Appendix for reproductions of these reviews. 3 The term "X ray" had not, at the time of this lecture, been generacceptc!-;:,mulanjuvo'IJ''-'' July 7-10, 1976, pp. I In this certain analogy problems in science and cOITespoIldence between Tesla and physicist en~;ap,f:d in the discovery of aucuv;;,,,,, gravitational, magnetic, electrical, electro- Ha~~H"'U". ~IJ'''''.''. botanic- and biologic-cell, and planetary fields, HIGH FREQUENCY APPARATUS 9 currents. design of physically small-size coils operating from existing municipal circuits is discussed, es- pecially those for use in physicians' offices then supplied with 110 volts current or 60/125 cycles secondl8 alternating current. Such were widely by physi- the 1900s for electrotherapeutic 19 7, Tesla has in- circuit allow- ing the alternate charging and discharging independent condensers in the primary circuit from the power source. He also to a modification of this circuit having "one con- tinuous contact common to two circuits, and independent for these," allowing not only an alternate charging discharge of condensers but their simulta- neous charging and discharge in parallel. These circuits are V'V,","\#V in Tesla's United States patent No. of 1897 (application filed Sept. 3, 1896). The importance this technique was obviously not recognized by those '>tt.:>,nr1, the was the heart of Tesla's later work on what to as the "art of individualiza- tion" and embodied in invention known today as the AND logic gate. Coming to diagram 8, the layout of circuit ele- ments is for the desk-top coil unit shown in which offered use in operating X-ray and various laboratory appliances. unit stood 18 inches high at discharge terminals and comprised several novel tures giving an energy conversion efficiency of 80 percent. months later, when Lord Kelvin attended a meeting of the British Association the Advancement of Science in 18 Although the unit "Hz" for frequency is now universally "U~'P"'U for measurement, at the time of publication of this 1897 lec- lure, and for some eight decades later, "cycles per second" was the unit of measurement. To avoid reading inconvenience Hz in editorial discussion and per second in the lecture text, cycles per second (cps) will be throughout this work. 19 High Electric Cur- rents in Medicine and (N.Y.: William R. Co., N.M., A Working Manual of High Frequency Currents New Medicine Publishing Co., appearing in editions from 1911 to 1923). 10 LECfURE COl\1J\1ENTARY Science in Toronto, Tesla units to him on the occasion of his Street tory in York City. several of units, and later proceeded to enter a business venture with a Mr. Hopkinson for the manufacture of a sizes of and X-ray units, but information about the establish- ment this business enterprise not been located.20 next briefly describes work phosphor-coated bulbs to the incandescent-filament bulbs developed by Edison. became interested developing a lamp that would equal the intensity of sunlight, and in January, 1894, the first photograph taken in Tesla's laboratory by light only from his phosphorescent lamp appeared in the April, 1895 of the Century Magazine. It was an eight-minute ex- posure, but a little more than two years Tesla had achieved such brilliance in lamps the May 20, 1896 issue of Electrical Review (N.Y.) carried an illustration of a two-second photograph Tesla taken with a lamp of candlepower-again by the light of bulb itself. Such a result with the combination of the eXisting emulsions and indoor lighting had not before been achieved. This single-electrode lamp, first shown by Tesla in 1891 first of trio series lectures in America and Europe during the years 1891-93 - was patent- ed by him that 21 Following this demonstra- tion, Elihu Thomson filed a of Lighting" patent application that was determined to in interference with Tesla's patent. laboratory that he did actually produce operating lamps with a con- ductor and lead-in However, Thomson was unable to prove such a demonstration, although asserting earlier on the subject, and his claim was therefore Patent Office declaring Tesla's priority in this vention.22 In an unpublished statement entitled "Tesla's Artificial Daylight," written by Tesla and designed to secure 20 Tesla letter to University Libraries). Scherff, Oct. 13, 1905 (Columbia 21 U.S. Patent No. 454.622 of June 1891, of Electric '-'115'L"I115'" application filed Apr. 1891. 22 U.S. Patent Office Interference No. 17334, Thomson vs. notice filed July 12, 1895, decision of priority to Tesla June 10, 1897. IDGH FREQUENCY APPARATUS 11 investment in a company to manufacture of mination were application this form of [interior lamps and are not only they are also from disadvantages as, the large cost installation, which is chiefly due to the quantity of copper required; the frequent of the lamps, owing to their unavoidable deterioration; the disagreeable ,.,n<''''''I"''''''' of the which, a small sur- is naturally too intense to the the necessity employing more or less opaque screens, which involve a considerable loss in illuminat- power, and many other drawbacks of this nature. It is true, that recently Nernst and have some gain in efficiency of incandescent lamps or by use coatings of rare which mit higher degrees incandescence. this departure not done away the objectionable features above mentioned-on the contrary, it has added to them. In new lighting system, all disadvantages are successfully removed. The light is produced with a smaller of energy, more one eighth of is presently the same quantity of it is soft and to the closely offers tures of an ideal of any de- candlepower may be adapted to any kind of current of supply, and they last indefinitely." We find that Tesla, one the early energy conservationists in engineering, was a number of lighting parata found in use prominently fluorescent-lamp All lectures from cessity completely air bubbles and coil units of high frequency, high oscillators. Not only amateur but professional engineers overlooked the harmful destructive in such components. on the necondenser disruptivern"'n"'''.~ and have allowing 12 LECTURE CO~NTARY the destruction of a used in a power was quickly, than raising the primary over days, allowing the coils to "cook" the oil bath. well, most amateur not taken the diligent, of their systems to It is often expressed, Tesla achieve brilliant resul ts? - I seem not to be able to re- produce them with the same effectiveness as he claimed," the of Sciences lecture, found it in some detail the which success by describing a of insu- lating and inductor a manufactur- ing sense. method was then two months the lecture excluding air or from the dielectric separating of high potential in proximity, or remote portions of the same conductors, in as perfect a manner as and in a con- venient practicable way.23 In all rolled-foil having waxed-paper were manufac- a modification of the method describes and by the Cornell Dubilier Company. 11, Tesla diagrammatically shows a pair of sec- wound wi th turns their mid- point brought out as a unit de- signed to withstand the encapsulation exerted by the manufacturing process previously Tesla U1...(\."".:> a significant statement the length of sec- coil windings, that each to or some- than a quarter wavelength electromagnetic prop- in the winding, thus allowing a maximum potential at ,the terminals. As such, these coils represent a paIr. on to describe the critically "'V11"-,111 Poggendorff ( of the spark gap in the early investiga- on the action of a 23 U.S. Patenl No. of Feb. Electrical Condensers, Coils. &c.," HIGH FREQUENCY APPARATUS 13 in a vacuum/4 and suggests various the design of the in the the necessary attention to the construction of the to produce currents of high voltage and frequency "causing showers or continuous streams of thick, thundering sparks to dart out into space to a distance of 8 or 9 ... some- times veritable lightning bolts." Many readers today, in looking at the photographs of the discharges that Tesla pro- duced in his laboratories, usually do not consider din as- ",,-,,-,.au..,u with such displays. Tesla has made in other writings to wearing ear plugs, and it has been reported that the noise from his experimental station at Colorado could 10 miles away. An element of "the discoverer's searching 1S found in observing an "exaggerated Thomson ,,25 noticed the pnmary circUlt of copper ribbon, the inactive portion of which should be no more than five percent, is perceptibly cooler heat parently carried away from the to the coatings of condenser. Of Tesla coils constructed then, no reports in open on this subtle, difficult-to-measure effect. Another aspect of primary circuit, as was found for the secondary circuit, is critical attention to length. Tesla that as as a quarter of an inch change in length of the primary circuit will have a pronounced effect on the performance of a coil! advocates that best is a''''Ul1~''''' when a stationary wave is fonned with a single 24 Poggendorff, J., "Effects of Interrupting a Current Within Dis- charge .. Philosophical 4th sec., Vol. 10, I pp. 203-307. 25 Britannica (1 defines the Thomson effect as "the evolution or absorption of heat when electric current passes through a circuit of a material that has a temperature difference between two points its This transfer of heat is superimposed on the common production heat by currents flowing through conductors because of their electrical resis- tance. If a copper wire carrying a steady electric current [i.e., direct CUf- rent] is subjected to external heating at a short section while the rest re- mains cooler, heat is absorbed from the copper as the conventional CUf- rent approaches the hot point, and heat is transferred to the beyond the hot point." 14 LECTURE COtv1MENTARY node located at a point of the discharge circuit or conductor equidistant from the opposite condenser coatings, as illustrated below. L, b, 5 L, b, With this design, a half-wave primary circuit length results. This may be difficult to achieve in practice for the construction of Tesla coil systems as revealed by the table shown below. For the desk-size unit illustrated in figures 9 and 12, for example, the operating frequency would be in excess of SOMc. Operating frequency of secondary 10 kc 50 " 100 " 500 " 1 Mc l 5" 10 " 50 " Length of primary to achieve halfwavelength 9.3 mi 1.9 " 4,900 ft 984 " 490 " 98 " 49 " 10 " It is obvious that for a secondary coil constructed as above, and the primary constructed according to the same design criterion as described earlier, both coils will have nearly the HIGH APPARATUS 15 same length and, essentially, the same number of turns-a 1: 1 turns ratio. It at first "How do we tain not from the secondary/primary turns the Qof the coils and a standing-wave condition that results in coils appropriate length also contribute substantially to Although significant resonant can be achieved in a transformer having a 1: 1 turns ratio from high Q values and properly adjusted length primary and secondary coils, such design is rarely undertaken. The desk-size units illustrated in figures 9 and req~i~e careful design of the primary operating mumCI- supply circuits of 110 volts, to obtain high current exci- tation of the primary coil. half-wave circuit loop from the condenser coatings is a unique way to accomplish But, when a high-voltage, high-current supply is available, then the advantage of higher numerical values for secon- dary/primary turns ratio (approximately the square root of respective inductance values ratio) prevails. Tesla advocated that the length of a grounded coil should be a quarter wavelength of the oscillation frequency, yielding the maximum potential at its terminal by virtue of a standing wave condition. The first of design was a photograph appearing in May 20, the New York Electrical Review showing Tesla seated an 8-foot diameter flat-spiral coil his labora- tory on Houston Street but without accompanying explana- tion. During this Tesla provided two diagrams showing these flat-spiral in experimental wireless transmi tting and receiving antenna circuits, again without explanation. 26 following this lecture, applied for his first on wireless telegraphy such coils technique, now universally employed, for quarter-wavelength radio transmitter antenna circuits.27 Oliver Shallenberger, known for his development the induction ampere-hour meter in 1888 for the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, which had committed itself to alternating current power equipment production by 26 See Sec. I-Addendum, 27 See note 4. 15 and 16, pp. 72, 73. 16 LECTURE COMMENTARY acquisition of the "famous 30" patents on motors and systems, contributed infonnation that has not appeared where the high frequency, voltage appara- tus used by in obtaining the presented in first of 1896 X-ray communications to the Electrical Review. 7JJ which are especially important, it may be that the current was taken from an alternator, of a frequency of periods per second, passed through a primary coil of a trans- fonner for increasing the e.mJ. from 100 to from 16 to thousand. The secondary current was then passed through Leyden jars and a double cascade of slightly separated brass cylinders, whereby it was changed an oscillatory current of an extremely high frequency, which was then connected through the ry of a second induction coil having very few turns of wire, no iron core and having a ratio of 7 to L By this means the was to between 160,000 volts to was used to energize the discharge the generation of X rays." we find that for driving experimental evacuated tubes, employed resonant-coil apparatus preserving a frac- tional wavelength for the secondary, than the The detennination of exact operating frequency oscillators was a vexing problem for all early investigators, a difficulty those today working with having time-base may not fully appreciate. Wave essentially a closed oscillatory circuit, with substitution inductances and variable were used in the near of WWL29 But before the tum of the century, experimenters and devised their own ad-hoc methods of frequency detennination. In this lecture, a carefully calibrated {1P','''''' he did not push to patent but for which the diagrams 7JJ Thompson, E.P., Roentgen Rays--and the Phenomena of the Anode and Cathode (D. Van Nostrand, 1896), pp. 136-138. 29 for Mauborgne, Practical Uses ofthe Wave Meter in Wireless Telegraphy (Mc-Graw Hill, 1913). l-llGH APPARATUS 17 presented in lecture clearly indicate that a patent was con- The patentable of device was the "visual synchronism" capability in reading divisions or markings a unifonnly rotating disk illuminated with flashes from neon or spark sources associated with the system to measured. device is today as the electronic- stroboscope pioneered by Harold Edgerton (1 1990). The mechanical fork, a tuning fork with slit shutter, been used others unaware of Tesla's tion until about 1910 for uniform motion measurements. When this editor showed Dr. a copy of a portion this lecture revealing much earlier with stro- boscopes using neon and arc flash illumination, replied no claim invention of the concept.30 disk shown Fig. has 10 radial segments on the outer ring, with radial segments 9, 8, 6 the succeeding inner rings. Note that in Fig. 14, the outer ring is further subdivided into 10/20 divisions per segment with a adjacent to that ring. Let r be the number of revolutions per second, s the number of radial in the ring, and a and b integral (I, 2, etc.). If the frequency of the flashes differs from r(s·a/b) by lib cycles second, then a·s radial seg- ments will appear to revolve at a rate of 1 radius per second. Thus, a disk of s radial illuminated b·s flashes each revolution appears a disk having b·s if flashes occur sib times for revolution, the disk appears to have s radial segments. this method to used as a detection scheme, it is dear that presence of continuous-wave would not of sufficient strength to excite a small neon flash lamp, typi- cally requiring 90 volts for ignition. Tesla describes asing the circuit containing the lamp to near ignition with a battery pack. A number these detection circuits are to found in Tesla's patent and in a pair of 30 Personal communication, Feb. 1988. 18 LECTURE COrv1MENTARY means and methods detection patents issued ceeding four 31 the suc- The method of synchronous rotating disks or employed by in continuous-wave and presented from 1901 to was the receiving methods in with visual synchronization measurement and de- tection schemes, publication of which would preempt patent disclosures, that undoubtedly caused not to commit this portion of lecture to publication. Lenard and Roentgen rays The discovery of vances achieving discovery of the William Crookes with various residual gas pressures of a few pink streamer is observed fills the entire cross duced. At about rate into identifiable proceeding from anode at the other U.S. Patent Nos. 61 of Nov. 8, 1898, "Method and for Controlling Mechanism of Moving Vessels of " application filed July 1, 1898; 685,954 of Nov. 5, 1901; "Method of Utilizing Effects Transmitted Through Natural " filed Aug. 1, 1899; and "Apparatus for Transmitted Through Natural 1899. .. application filed Nov. 2, 32 U.S. Patent Nos. of Nov. 5, 1901, "Method of Inten- and Utilizing Effects Transmitted Natural "1'1>11'-""")" filed June 1 of Nov. 5, 1901, Effects Transmitted From a Distance to a Receiving Natural Media," filed Sepl. 9, 1899; and of April 18, 1905, "Art Electrical Energy Through the Natural Mediums," application filed May 16, 1900. HIGH FREQUENCY APPAR.A.TUS 19 the Crookes dark space (in German literature, Hittorff dark space), negative glow region, Faraday dark space, and lastly the positive column with striations are observed. It is the positive column that is seen in neon signs operating at several millimeters of pressure. Lowering the pressure from 0.1 millimeters of mercury, the Crookes dark space lengthens with the striations in the positive column becoming farther apart. At roughly 0.08 millimeters, the cathode dark space reduces in length to about l centimeter. The Crookes dark space, negative glow, and Faraday dark space regions will remain fixed in length along the tube with the positive column taking up the remaining length of the tube regardless of the tube's length. At pressures substantially below 0.01 millimeter, a green Iluorescence appears on the inner walls of the tube, and below 0.001 millimeter, the tube becomes dark. As an aid in evaluating the degree of vacuum obtained for the Lenard and Roentgen tubes that Tesla investigated and demonstrated, when a vacuum is on the order of 0.001 millimeter of mercury the X rays are easily absorbed, minimally passing through the human hand. These rays are referred to as soft X rays, roughly a few angstroms in wavelength. At 0.0003 millimeters of mercury, exceedingly high voltages are needed to produce a discharge and the X rays are quite penetrating, able to pass through the bones of a hand with little absorption. These rays are referred to as hard X rays, about 0.1 angstrom in wavelength. It is significant that Tesla considered both Lenard and Roentgen rays in his communications and lecture regarding "penetrating rays" through substances. Some astonishment was expressed by radiologists of the results Tesla achieved in his experiments not only at the time they were presented in the lecture and in his 1896-97 communications appearing in the Electrical Review but as well by those reviewing these reports many years later. This is primarily because Tesla's researches involved both Lenard and Roentgen apparatus, as the titles of his reports so state, but his communications on the subject ha\'e generally been interpreted in terms of only X-ray apparatus and effects. 20 LECfURE CO:tv1MENTARY In briefly reviewing "rays" it is noted Philipp Lenard (1862-1947), in 1893, announced discovery of invisible rays produced a Crookes and capable of passing through a thin aluminum window. Now known as "Lenard rays", these are beams capable of passing window The thin aluminum window become known as a "Lenard window," in his experiments penetrating were produced at the point of first impact-the window. Lenard, Roentgen, or other researchers knew what they were dealing with in terms of "rays" up to that time. as well as other were at the fore- front investigation, undertaking researches to answer fundamental of the nature of rays particles. In the Academy of Sciences lecture, Tesla demonstrated a source of powerful rays which he as more nr\,cx",.,r_ ful than any before available.33 The source of the was an arc closely-spaced electrodes in vacuum, now recognized as extreme ul traviolet radiation (approx. 500 angstroms). The ability to distinguish soft X and ex- treme ultraviolet was then difficult. But 1897 a new era of the sub-atomic identified electrons mass, elm, and lated. physics calcu- Kelvin was in opposition to the evolving theories of atomic structure advanced Thomson, Rutherford, and others. was greatly influenced, for most of his lifetime, by the of Rudjer Boscovic (1711-1787), an extraordi- narily remarkable scientist who in engineering, ar- chitecture, and archeology.34 Of Boscovic remarked an unpublished 1936 interview article, 33 Refer to Appendix for a review of the lecture April 1897. in the ....Aauu.,'lljl:5 the life and work of Boscoof the 200th anniver- HIGH APPARATUS 21 relativity theory by is much older than its nri"CP''1r proponents. It was advanced over 200 ago by my illustrious countryman Boscovic, great philosopher who, not withstanding other and multifold obligations, wrote a volumes of lent literature on a vast of subjects. J...I""£","<1' with relativity, so-called conti nuum...." 1884 Baltimore 35 referred to 36 and in 1890s adopted Boscovic's terpretation forces, the "force curve." When Thompson published the discovery of the electron 1897, Kelvin extended the concepts Boscovic to of electrons accounting for all phenomena and ra- dioactivity-a model explaining ejecting at velocity_ not Tesla's contemporary writings on but acknowledged years later, the theo- ries of Boscovic and Kelvin had influence on his pretation of experimental obtained. Let us some of the results described Tesla in his researches during period. rectly that the source of rays is place offirst of the stream of particles in the bulb."37 familiar of today, the rays emanate from a massive anode inside a tube bombard- ed by an stream of electrons a heated cathode under high potential difference. anode target is, this case, place of first impact of particle streams pro- duced inside tube. In his "On Reflected J.''-'''''lHi~''''U Apri I 1, 1896 Electrical 35 Baltimore Lectures on Molecular \LA!UUvu. Cambridge and the Wave 1904). 36 Theoria Philosophire Naturalis redaeta ad unieam legem virium in natura existentium (Venetia: Editio Venetia prima ipso auctore prresente, et corrigente, 1763). 37 See Section III. 22 LECTURE COrvtMENTARY qualitative description of the intensity of rays which he interpreted to be reflected from a dozen metal and nonmetallic surfaces. He also reported that the relative strength of the re-radiations from the various metals agreed with the sequence of these metals in the activity series developed by Volta. At that time, the phenomenon of secondary radiation of X rays had not been hypothesized. It was not until 1922 that Arthur Compton presented in monogra~h form a definitive analysis of secondary X-ray radiation. 8 It showed that Tesla's series of the relative strength of what he interpreted to be "reflected rays" from various metals agreed with the mass absorption coefficients for these metals when excited by soft X rays; i.e. in the region of 1 angstrom. The following year, the first successful reflection of X rays with a very small incident glancing-angle of the radiation was reported by Compton, thus revealing the experimental difficulty. Tesla found no evidence of X-ray diffraction, but a dozen years later research apparatus became available providing W.H. Bragg, Max von Laue, Ernst Pohl, and Bernhard Walter the opportunity to show diffraction. As well, Tesla found no evidence of refraction. In 1925 the first successful experiments showing refraction were reported by Larsson, Siegrahn, and Waller. 39 A review of the Academy of Sciences lecture finds Tesla stating he had succeeded in deflecting Roentgen rays by a magnet- the rays also charging a condenser at some distance. oW But in his communications appearing in the April 22 and August 12, 18% issues of the Electrical Review, he modifies his remarks saying Lenard rays could be deflected by a magnetic field whereas Roentgen rays could not as observed by exposure of fluorescent-emulsion films. Thus, he identified a distinction between them in their producing penetrating rays. When the energy of Lenard rays is abruptly 38 Compton, A.H., "Secondary Radiations Produced by X-Rays," Bulletin of the National Research Council, October 1922, (Vol. 4, Pt. 2, No. 20), the third and last of a series which formed the report of the Committee on X-Ray Spectra. 39 Larsson, A., Siegrahn, M., and Waller, T., "The refraction of x rays," Physical Review, Feb. 1925, p. 235. oW Refer to Appendix for a review of the lecture appearing in the EleclricalEngineer, Apr. 14, 1897. HIGH APPARATlIS 23 by a magnetic from a bulk I"ytt'rt'." source or an individual atom, as in passing through a window or in the bombardment of a massive nomenon bremsstrahlung radiation results. Bremsstrahlung is observed moving with radiation a motion."! From apparatus, X explainable result. for light particles such as through matter. par- that di- descriptions with by bremsstrahl ung is an The tubes that Tesla one a cathode. in his researches had only remarked, if we put two in a bulb ... , we limit for """""'11"''''' not only of the anode but any conducting the practicable JX)tential on for such a tube, sion stream emanating at the other place of first cathode would tube. an emlsthe glass appearing in the March 18, 1896 describes obtaining shadow at a distance of 40 if it as- that X rays were produced at the envelope at of the tube, that would not fully account the abil- ity to obtain X-ray graphs at such a distance as 40 feet. most interesting a tube to ously produced: were, in the main, wi Lenard rays through a thin aluminum window, that could not distinguished or molecular He gives a the process in point where are f we attach a fairly exhausted an elec- trode to the terminal of a disruptive coil, we observe 41 Feynman, R.P " Lectures on Physics (Reading, Mass.: 1963, Addison-Wesley), Vol. 1 of 3, p. 34--6. 42 E1ectrical March 11, 1896. 24 LECTURE CO.M1v1ENTARY small streamers breaking through the of the Usually such a streamer will through the and crack the bulb, whereupon the vacuum is impaired; but, if the seal is placed above the terminal, or if some other provision is made to prevent the streamer from passing through the glass at that point, it often occurs that the stream breaks out through the side of the bulb, produc- ing a fine hole. Now, the extraordinary thing is that, in spIte of the connection to the outer atmosphere, air cannot rush into the bulb as long as the hole is very at place where the rupture oc- curred may grow very hot-to such a degree as to soft- en; but it will not collapse, bulge out, showing that a pressure from the inside than that of the atmosphere On I have ob- served that bulges out and the hole, which the streamer out, becomes so large as to perfectly discernible to the As the matter is expelled from the bulb rarefaction increases and the streamer and less whereupon the es again, hermetically sealing opening. process of rarefaction, nevertheless, continues, streamers being still visible on the heated place until the highest degree of exhaustion is reached, whereupon they may disappear. Here, then, we have a positive evidence that matter is being expelled through the walls of the ,.,43 This curious process, in its examination a near century later, that the internal was the resul t an internal force. operated his single-electrode bulbs at extremely high voltage, high frequency currents. An elec- tron beam develops at the cathode as a result of high-field emission during the negative half of the current cycle.44 It concentrates on a point at the end of the tube arising either localized ionic stress, trace im- purities, or a high of dopant additives. The 43 Electrical Review, March 18, 1896. 44 For a discussion of the internal process of bulbs excited by frequency, high voltage alternating currents, see Corum, J.F., and Corum, K.L., "Critical Speculations Tesla 's Invention and of Electrode X-Ray JJll''''"'''AI Discharges for Power Processing, Resonances and Particle Beam Weapons," of the 1986 International Tesla Sym- posium, Colorado pp. 7-21 - 7-44. HIGH APPARATUS 25 spot then becomes a virtual because of temperature between annealing and melting points (variable with ~lass composition, approx. 4S0-S00°C and 1 I ,SOO C, respectively), resulting in significant conductivity to the outer surface in contact with dispersed-medium return of the high voltage source impressed on the cath- ode. When a point color, its specific re- ",,,,,<1,11'_'-' can drop from 100 trillion ohm-centimeters at room temperature to 10,000 ohm-centimeters at annealing tem- perature and unity at the point. using such ex- tremely high voltages on and single-electrode tubes, Tesla advises in his communication appearing in March 18, issue of not to overheat them In continued use. This editor has viewed a video an experiment performed 1985 by Dollard showing the same process a single-electrode bulb developing a hot spot, the glass bulg- ing out, rarefaction increasing, and bulb subsequently resealing. This process yet to critically investigated. Tesla's December 1896 communication to Electrical Review refers to a "material projecting from single-electrode bulb and he later remarks, to wonderful gun, in- deed, projecting of a thousandfold greater pene- trative power than that of a cannon ball, and carrying probably to distances of many miles, with veloci- not producible in any way we know of." This germinal idea of projected particle in air, the succeeding experimental work undertaken in Colorado Springs 1899 extremely high potentials and the of electron beams, undoubtedly crys- Tesla's approach a particle-beam weapon he to the allied powers as WWII storm- clouds were gathering.cls 45 This design appears in of the Tesla Centennial Symposium, Colorado Springs, 1984, pp. 144-1 an abbreviated fonn for unit expressions: e.g., acceleration vAl"''''''''"''"' simply as "meters" rather than umelers/second2." A of this "1J1J'V tubes. He medical dangers in the l"''''''U''Ull experiments the body-exposing a the hand be(.:on11 swollen. Believing a mechanical injury, he thrust his hand dose to window of the tube and instantly pain. The pain lasted a days afterward and later he observed that all the hair was destroyed and that the nails on hand had grown anew. describes the tightening of or stiffening of when a hand is held dose to win- dow of the In a sever case, the skin gets deeply ored and places, and ugly, ill-foreboding blis- ters form~ thick come off, exposing raw discharges pain, feverishness When unknown the human who either inadvertently or known experiments having uncer- tain outcome to taught the valuable lessons from which we benefit a result of the harmful Tesla experienced, continues in these communications advocacy for the proper construction and shielding apparatus with particular concern for medical and patients. Tesla was the constant trical inventor and Thomson nor (later acquired by cessful in challenging of Elihu Thomson, an of the period. Neither Electric Company Company) were sucWestinghouse Electric and HARIvlFUL ACTIONS 27 Manufacturing Company on the Tesla for alternating current distribution systems motors. The scene courts \vas all too walking in, in attire his attorneys, and as a witness astonishing court and ",,,,,,,,,,,,"v,,,rC' with a dis- of recan and caustic wi t. biographer shows at- tempting to elevate by misstatements of cerning subject's competitor or adversary. biographer, David Woodbury:16 saw Columbian demonstrating Tesla's of alternating current distribution a nonevent- Thomson presumably had accomplished the various demonstrations! In an i Thomson X rays, Abrahams and Marion in their compilation of son's correspondence,47 engage in unbecoming distortion by entering a surprisingly impertinent ref- erence note for a letter from Dr. William Greene to Thomson dated December 20, 18%, mentioning an burn suf- fered by Thomson on his finger during editors mention Thomson's "lively controversy with Tesla who thought that X rays were ." No such an exchange on the of harmful X-ray radiation, but a lively exchange did occur between six years prior to the of lecture on the nature effects of high frequency currents. Although beneficial the readership in providing an airing of the it appeared at the expense of Thomson.48 reconstructed of lecture follows. It is now seen as a contribution to the history of scientific and elOiprrienrs period not previously nt''''''''" LJ.A 46 Woodbury, D.n, Beloved Scientist (McGraw-Hill, 1944). 47 Selecrions from the Scientific sou (see note 8). of Elihu Thom- 48 The exchange occurred in a succession of communications to the Electrical World following the in its Feb. 1891, issue of the first of Tesla's trio-series on high frequency alternating currents: Thomson, Mar. pp. 204-5; Mar. 21, pp. Thomson, 4, p. TesIa, Apr. 11 , pp. 272-3. I haunted thee where the Ibis From the Bracken's crag to the Tree. N. Tesla November 4, 1934 Section I IMPROVED ApPARATUS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF Pow- ERFUL VIBRATIONS; HIGH CY MEASUREMENT .L.a\J1,"," & Gentlemen: You will still vividly, no the which a year ago was by the announcement of the discoveries of Professor Roentgen. Suddenly, without any preparation, Roentgen surprised world with two won- derful results. showed us how to a photographic impression of an object invisible to the and, what seemed more extraordinary, enabled us, the help of his luminous screen-now known as the fluoroscope-to see, with our own outlines the object. We are living in an of exceptional intellectual activity, and im- advances are often recorded, but were almost the order of the telescope and and such dis- come no more than once or in a century. Scarcely can anyone of us hope to again witness in his life- time an event of so widespread a scientific and popular inter- est. desire to see things which seem hidden from sight is more or strongly developed in human being,through all degrees of this sentiment, from curiosity the unenlightened to the absorbing for knowledge of highly refined, and this in sufficient to engage universal apart these discoveries brought promise of to sufferers and allover the world the fibers humani- ty. It is hardly necessary for me to tell you that the hold of me also, mine was a singular, grave case, I had not recovered from its effects to this day. I hope you will pardon a slight digression which I have a strong reason to 30 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN and not so m"~h those of in: and~scer.: t 'V:ICU'.I1II t:.bes, al~houeh s~e phot0i;n.i'hs ...er~ 11;';11",15<1 taJc.:n wI;!! these. As bo~h the art1s~5 and m. Gelt were b~5~' on other IMt~ers t he plates 1n t!!6ir ordinar, holders ...·ere trequcntl:l·pl.lt in 110:118 corner of ~h~ labora~or,· i.lntil II 5"itab}" o.?portunH,; tor carr;;1ns on the expQl'imcn ts was t;)Und, Dt;.r1ng these invest191tions mall}· plates gave a res"lt, wMla m«nJ others falled. and on s.me of these hoth :!r. Alle::. 'lilt,) then asdshd me, lind myselt noted unacoountable marks ar.d defects. Ur. Alle# partlcularl# tound It ~~trllordlnar, that, In $~lte of his <:"r8, l!Ir direction so as to the terminals of the two wooden are wound. thin fiber to solidity and '''''-'''''''''.... wax to fill the hollow insulating process centers of spools are fastened bushings to which the free ends of the are connected and into which can be ss. are fastened to the end of rubber rr, through which pass flex- ible wires ww, heavily insulated with gutta-percha, which serve to connect secondary high potential ends to the on the top of the instrument (Fig. 9), It not to insulate the wires ww with soft rubber, kind of insulation is soon destroyed by at their surface in consequence of the even if the rubber be very thick. insulation between the superimposed is practically determined from an difference of potential between _"'''.__ '.] I have used heavily insulated wires with from two to four braids, but presently I am ordinary wire which, in manufacturing the coil, wound with a string of a thickness equal to of the is a convenient mode of insulating, not prepared wire and secures re- of the secondary circuit, or common is connected to ground, or so the mains, 50 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN and this generally through primary discharge The small contact plate, or spring serves to establish con- upon the secondary being the pri- mary coil. The length of the secondary coils is so determined that it is somewhat less or equal to a quarter of the of the disturbance produced in the course, on the es- propagation of through this circuit. It is obviously that the length of the secondary circuit is made to approximate more or less a quarter of the wavelength, according to how much allowance is made for the capacity of the circuit under nor- working conditions. the ordinary uses of the instru- as [a] laboratory chiefly for production effects tension discharges, little a1- is generally capacity the terminals~ but if the apparatus is for instance generating a quantity of streamers between plates of surface, charging from the or [other] uses, then of the is made much smaller, and advantageously an even fraction of a of that which is without any for capacity than that by the coil. Finally, if secondary currents of low tension are desired, the coil is constructed one spool and of only layers, all in proXImIty to primary so as to the mutual induction coefficient reduce the resonant rise of potential as much as possi- ble. The closure of the magnetic circuit oxygen at ordi- or high while of little with low currents, is a remarkable wi th currents these unusually when conditions are the occurrence resonant phe- nomena, and I am anticipating practical uses of oxygen in connection. A secondary coil constructed in manner illustrated 11 has many important advantages, the chief ones being safety in handling and the facility it affords for obtaining ootentlals far those producible if the ordinary of construction are followed. In to convey an SECTION I 51 of the pressures obtainable even with so small an instrument as one described, a photograph the same action with two loops of cotton-covered wire attached to the dis- charge rods, is added (Fig. outer wire loop was in the experiment only in diameter to enable it being properly shown in the print, but it could have been much larger since two parallel wires feet long may be stretched the secondary terminals of instrument practically the whole space between them, 4 inches wide, is seen in dark covered with fine luminous streamers. is a surface of 5 square feet, and yet the energy taken from the supply circuit during the performance is 35 watts. To produce with an ordinary transformer such a quantity of these streamers, which may be for manufacture of ozone or similar purposes, would require a considerably amount of and a more costly ap- paratus. These extreme of potential obtainable by the use the principle here involved are the result of the enor- mous suddenness or rate of change the primary current impulses. In the ordinary method of the strength of the primary current, either by alternating same or break- the conducting path, we are limited to the comparatively insignificant rate of producible by means of a high frequency or rapid but by use of the condenser discharges is practically no limit to the sud- denness the impulses, and any potentials and spark lengths desired can be readily obtained. instance, I have been able to produce, by applying the principle in a peculiar manner, immense the theoreti- cal maximum value of which can measured only in many millions volts, causing showers of continuous streams thundering to dart out into to a distance of 8 or 9 feet from an insulated wire, which behave some- times like veritable lightening bolts and have afforded to the few who witnessed them during last two or three years in my laboratory a not easily forgotten. Nor is it at all difficult to increase, a hall or open space, 52 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN Fig. 12.-Photograph of coil system illustrated in figure 11 in action. Luminous streams cover an area of 5 square feel SECTION I 53 many times the potential and sparking distance by the employment of such means and methods, Although in oscillators great suddenness of change the strength of currents depends chiefly on the electrical constants of the some advantages of minor but practical importance may secured by a proper con- struction of the devices used as convenient, though not in- dispensable, accessories of system for the purpose of ar- bitrarily making and breaking circuits. Accordingly, I have devoted considerable time to their study and perfec- tion, and in connection with the typical arrangements of the circuits illustrated in 1, 4, and 5, I have dwelt in my earlier on this subject on a variety of such circuit temlpters in vacuum, air, other fluids at low or great pressures. It been known long ago, the investigations Poggendorff, that, when the vibrator or break of an induc- tion was enclosed in an exhausted vessel, interrup- tion of the currents was suddenness, the vacuous space acting in a certain measure like a con- denser, connected, as usual, around the break. Myexperi- ments wi th several kinds of such circui t breakers have led me to that vacuous space is not exactly equivalent a but of an the rrp!l""'rI suddenness being simply due to the rapid carrying away of the volatilized material forming the arc and, there- fore, dependent on the velocity with which disintegrated matter is away and also on amount of latter. Thus, with very hard platinum-iridium contacts small currents, there is little difference; but, with soft platinum points and heavy currents, influence of the vacuum is well noticeable, while, with mercury or in easily volatilizable conductors, the difference is very great. The of the exhausted is also of some consequence, break gaining suddenness when the is larger. Looking at Poggendorff's observations in this light, it ap- peared clear to me that only a small velocity of the particles composing arc can be obtained the effective at least with low frequency impulses 5+ THE STREAMS OF LENARD Al\TD ROENTGEN mechanical means, and with currents of limited strength which can be passed through the contacts without quickly destroying them, is necessarily only a minute fraction of the atmosphere being besides, very materially reduced by the oppositely acting attraction of the parallel-current elements of the arc. Pursuing further this train of reasoning, it seemed likewise evident that, if an insulating fluid be forced mechanically between the contact points with such velocity that the particles composing the arc were carried away quicker than it was possible with a small pressure producible in the gaseous matter in vacuum, the suddenness of disruption would be increased. This conclusion was borne out by my experiments in which I found that a fluid insulator, such as oil or alcohol, forced through the gap with even moderate velocity, increased very greatly the maximum rate of change of the primary current, and the length of secondary wire necessary for a certain spark length was in some instances reduced to 25 percent of that usually required. The length of the secondary was still further reduced by the use of insulating fluids under great pressure. As regards the suddenness of the current impulse following the closing of the contacts, the introduction of an insulating space or film of greater dielectric strength than that of the air at ordinary pressure, though producing a distinct effect, is of small consequence when the interrupter in 1tS operation actually breaks the arc, since the electromotive force of a battery or municipal supply circuit is generally insufficient to break down an insulating film of even so small a thickness as 0.001 inch. The continued effort to perfect the various automatic contrivances for controlling the supply current has clearly brought out their mechanical limitations, and the idea of utilizing the discharges of the condenser as a means for producing, independently of such mechanical devices, the sudden variations of the current which are needed for many pur- poses in the arts, appears evermore a happy and timely solution. In this novel process, a function of only minor importance is assigned to the mechanical means; namely, that of merely starting periodically the vibration of the electromagnetic system, and they have no other requirements to fulfill beyond those of reliability in operation and durability, features which are left to the skill of the mechanic and which, SECTION I 55 in a fair measure, it was not difficult to attain in a number of types. Considering, then, that the rate of change of the discharge or primary current in these instruments is made to depend chiefly on the physical constants of the circuit through which the condenser discharges, it is evidently of utmost importance to construct properly the latter circuit, and in the QallOrlS which were carried on with this object in view, several noteworthy observations have been made. First of all, one draws the obvious conclusion that, inas- much as the primary coil in a transformer of this kind con- usually very few turns of copper of inappre- ciable resistances, the insulation between the turns should not require much care. practical soon con- vinces him of his error, for, very often it happens that, owing to an exceptional resonant difference of tential between adjacent turns becomes so great as to rupture even a good ordinary insulation. this reason, it was found necessary to treat the primary coils likewise in the manner described, thus securing the additional advantage of which from the expansion of the metal sheets and thickening of the insulating layers during the heating in vacuum and subsequent contraction of the metal in cooling to the normal temperature after the insulation has solidified. the experimenter is surprised when realizing the importance the proper adjustment of the length of the pri- mary coil He is naturally prepared to find that, the discharge circuit is of small length, the introduction in this circuit of a small inductance or tional would produce an appreciable difference in result obtained as, for instance, in the spark length of the secondary coil. But he certainly does not expect to observe that sometimes as little as 1/4 inch conductor more or less would be of a telling effect. To illustrate: It is quite easy to produce with this kind of apparatus a spark of feet in length, and by merely taking off or adding to the primary 56 THE STREAMS OF LENARD Al\ro ROENTGEN wire so the spark length to one this kind impress the experimenter with the importance the adjustment circuits accurate determination of constants. is forcibly to the of reducing as much as it is practicable self-induction and resistance dis- circuit, former with object of the quickest possible vibration, the chiefly for reasons of necessity bringing down to the minimum resistance all con- necting wires. A discharge a small instrument, as the one should five percent of inactive conductor; its should negligible, the self-induction should be not more than a few centimeters)'" 1 I found it Impera- to use thin the pri- mary coils, with these an is the most curious of been made. It occurs, namely, that, under certain conditions, the primary coil gets cooler by continued working. For a long time this appeared doubtful, but finally it was positively ascertained and as- cribed to an effect, to which heat is of the COI1denS(~r. to the tinfoil It might not appear quite at first why the primary discharge is so to variations of length, for a circuit of length connected to condenser and, that between capacity and is as to satisfy laid down by KelVin, oscillatory discharge will take But it must remembered that the velocity of propagation of the disturbance in the circuit depends on quantities, and that best result is when the velocity is that a wave is with a single node which is located but not always, at a point of discharge circuit or conductor equidistant from the opposite '"''VA......'"'' coatings. Under such the maximum pressure at the terminals is obtained. units. a few tenths microhenrys. SECTION I 57 possible when the speed of the is such that this exactly in the time one vibration. Now, since the circuit very small, .........'V110 of the length may often pro- performance of the appara- tus. course, should not be construed as generally al.l~/H.....aUl""'. only to such cases in which started by one operation of the not die out before the succeeding operation the controller. may be made clear by a mechanical Suppose a weighted spring is clamped in a blow is struck which sets the spring vibrating. vibrations die out and let anoth- er blow be delivered. will vibrate again as be- fore, and it matters little weight is attached to the spring, what the elasticity or, in general, what its period of vibration, and at the blows are de- livered, process blows into the p",,.rO'u of the energy of the vibrations will effected with equal economy, except for ".....-VH....""l causes, immaterial for the present consideration. so is it with the magnetiC system, and in of practical adaptation of the ments described, I have nary or electrolytic, of very them to discharge at a primary circui t thus producing current reach, at least theoretically, 100,000 amperes. A high maximum rate mary current was thus produci ble, but, erage rate of change was still small. '-"vue....."'" mechanical analogue before at once derived. Looking upon the pliance for converting energy, both and output mand that the vibration of the spring should nprClIH as possible and that the blows should be is practicable. To satisfy this twofold 58 TIIE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN must of be delivered the spring is still vibrat- ing, and now it becomes most important to properly time the blows. Similarly again, the electromagnetic system, the controller must operate at definite intervals of to secure most vibration with the supply of energy. In the construction of pm:;tlcal ments, number of the fundamental current impulses is arbitrarily adopted; the condenser, prepared by a spe- process, cannot be adjusted great inconve- and and to a extent also the turns of the primary coil are likewise determined beforehand from practical considerations. Furthermore, it is desirable, reasons of economy, not to resort to an otherwise conve- nient method of adjustment, which would be to a vari- able self-induction in with primary These conditions more difficult the exact adjustment of the various quantities, and I have sometimes found it of advan- tage to adopt one or other plan such as will readily suggest themselves. For example, I have used an additional coil wound upon the primary and connected in parallel to the same, or I have completed the adjustments by determining properly the self-induction and capacity of the secondary coiL In order to facilitate the observation and to enable the exact determination of the oscillations of electromagnetic systems as well as of vibrations or revolutions of me- chanical such as circuit controllers used con- ''''''''''VJ'', it was recognized as indispensable, in the course of investigations, to construct a proper apparatus for such purposes. I determined from outset to myself what is known as visual synchronism. In this scheme, usu- ally a or cylinder with marks or divisions, which is ro- tated with uniform is illuminated by a periodically varying or intermittent source of light, divisions appear- stationary space when revolutions of the disk are synchronous with the in intensity or intermittence of the light-giving source. The virtue of such a method evidently resides in uniformity the velocity of rotation or eventually in the of period of the vibration produced. Having been confronted with problem SECIIONI 59 of rotating a body with rigorously uniform velocity, which is required many instances, or with the problem producing a vibration of constant period, I have devoted some to the study of this subject, in the course of time several solutions, more or practical satisfac- tory, have presented themselves. for instance, was to by means of nrp·"",,,,·t1 air or steam, the vibration of a freely movable plunger to which was rigidly connected a coil or core of an electric generator. the motion of the plunger, alternating currents were generated which were passed through a or through primary of a transformer, in which case the secondary coil of latter was joined to the terminals of the condenser. Care being taken that the air or steam pressure was applied only during a short interval of when plunger was passing through the center of and the oscillations of the system, composed of and generating coil, being properly determined so that funda- mental resonance took place, it was found that, under such conditions, the governed the of plunger; the applied fluid pressure, while capable of producing in the ampli- tude, were very wide without any appreciable on period of vibration of mechanical system, the currents generated therefore of rigorously constant period. currents thus obtained were then utilized in a number of ways to produce uniform rotation. Another way to the same resul t and in a more prac- tical manner was to currents of differing phase by a steam engine of special design, which the reciprocating motion of the work performing plungers and attached mag- netic cores or coils was controlled by a freely oscillating valve, the period of which was maintained constant by mechanical means or by the use an electromagnetic tern, similarly as before. A synchronous alternating motor operated by the two or three phase currents thus generated rotated with so uniform a velocity as to drive the wheel work of a with fair 60 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN Still other solutions of the problems to I may mention which, though satisfactory, have proved some- times convenient and sufficient for many purposes. a direct-current motor laminated or without any iron, was connected in series with a condenser through a commutator or interrupter fastened on the shaft a light [weight] armature. This device was so constructed that it alternately closed and opened the terminals of con- as usual in the instruments before described. The condenser terminals being closed, a strong current impulse through the motor, and upon the terminals being opened the discharge current high tension rushed into the But the duration of both of suc- ceeding current impulses, and consequently all which passed through the motor, were made chiefly dependent on the self-induction of motor coils on the capacity of the condenser and were, therefore, with certain limits of variation the applied little dependent on latter, and consequently a motor with a negligible tion operated in this manner, turned with nearly uni- form velocity. The was the more constant controlling influence of electromagnetic sys- tem which, of course, was most complete when the number current impulses, the capacity, and self-induction were so adjusted fundamental resonance was ~u,"'~. As before in most these novel instruments described, such adjustments are observed and, whether pro- vided with rotating interrupters or circuit-controlling springs, they partake more or less of virtue pre- ceding principle. For this reason, the contact springs in these instruments not fall into harmonics, as they do ordinary induction coils from supply circuits where physical constants are generally such that similar adjustments are impracticable. It should that, a long time, it was known a motor, driven with currents terrupted at regular intervals, a marked tendency to maintaining a constant speed; but by introduction a condenser in the circuit and the careful adjustment quantities, this is very much and for many purposes a uniform SECTION I 61 obtained in this manner. Instead of using interrupted cur- rents for operating the motor, it is practicable to rotate a sep- arate coil, wound on same or on a second arma- and to pass alternating currents generated in this coil through the condenser. It is important for the attainment a satisfactory result in such cases to determine the con- stants so that the amount of stored in the COlna(~nSler should as large as possible. While a number of such arrangements were readily avail- able, it was found, nevertheless, that they were inadequate to the many different requirements of the laboratory, and ac- cordingly an instrument was devised which is illustrated in 13 abo It proved itself to so necessary and valu- able an implement in experimental investigations that scription here may afford information. cut is in- ."''',...v .... to show a substantial and carefully constructed clock mechanism with the usual escapement e, gearwheels ggg, and a I-second pendulum A small shaft s, carrying a disk of diameter, was geared to the clockwork through a pinion p of a proper number of teeth, as to give to the shaft a velocity best suitable for observations. Now, in to rotate the with a uniform velocity, some diffi- culties, well known to clockmakers, had to be overcome. is due to the fact that rotation of shaft s, being controlled by the escapement e, which, at ular intervals, retards train of wheels ggg, is not effected with uniform but periodically varying velocity, which may all values from zero to a maximum, dependent on the driving weight W. Owing to this circumstance, when such a disk D of large diameter is rigidly geared to any kind clockwork, it exerts, by reason of the momentum which it necessarily acquires, a strong reaction upon the pendulum, altering the of the same more or less, ac- cording to the momentum it This difficulty is known to even in cases in which the step by step movement is practically done away with, as, for in with centrifugal governors, or circular pendu- which slow oscillations are produced the reac- the moving mass upon the regulating Ul...,.......U.1U.:>Ul R) ~ ! rfJ o 'Tl hz 1 ~ ~ ~ I t:f Fig. 13.-Special instrument to exactly determine wavelength and phase. SECTION I 63 have proposed an tween the body driven and the [do] away radically with the difficulty. when, in an attempt to overcome step-by-step movement, a whereby the periods of rest are the inf1uence of the momentum of the body upon the nprl£Vl of the pendulum, the result aimed at is but imperfect- and, besides, such an apparatus is suitable observation. Namely, it will be recognized as desirable for a number of reasons the disk D should be rotated normally either once or twice a to whether a 1- or lA-second pendulum is used. This being the case, the experimenter can render himself easily an account of the constancy of the speed by observing a mark m on the and noting that it occupies a fixed position in rel- to that of the pendulum, in a phase tion. the computation the vibrations is ren- dered more convenient under such conditions. problem, clearly put, was then to rotate a as the disk or other with any desired but uniform ve- locity in a such the of vibration of pen- dulum was not affected, even though the rotated possessed considerable momentum. entirely satisfactory solution of this problem was arrived at in the following manner. On end of the shaft s, Fig. b, was fastened a light metal piece f in the shape a cross, carrying on two its opposite sides pivoted pawls PI and on the other two light springs rj which the pawls gently against the periphery of a washer w, which was provided with many very fine teeth or serrations cut SImI- larly to of escapement ranged to turn very tened the di sk D. edges to fit in the w, and means disk could rotate freely on the shaft s in the tion indicated the arrows, but rotation the direction was prevented by the 64 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN apparatus now be at once un- escapement wheel e was by unscrewing the thumb screw t and shifting the sleeve S on rocking support. The pendulum was next started when the escapement wheel had attained the normal ve- locity, the sleeve S was slipped back quickly fastened-control escapement being thus to pendulum. work and the shaft snow rn"'"""" with periodically varying but the disk D to move uniformly, the pawls Pl P2 slipping on the periphery of the washer w during periods when of the the pendulum. to the very but unavoidable in and bearings, the disk would slowly diminish and fall below maximum velocity which the shaft s was capable of impart- ing to then the pawls would give it a impulse, in this manner the disk was kept constantly at the maximum velocity. By each of the pendulum, the disk would thus one its on the energy to it by the succeeding This amount of energy of course, on of the shaft s during the period when the '-'0...,..AtJ"'- ment was free, since this velocity was determined by the driving weight, the speed of the of the disk could within limits by the weight. It will observed would rotate faster than weight so that the pendulum. infl uence of period the pendulum is course, could not be 'UL<:UU\:;U with s, even if a used, as suggested. uniformity rotation se- cured in this way leaves, for all practical at least, nothing to desired. The apparatus might been im- proved by supporting the on an independent bearing SECTION I 65 and, perhaps, by it horizontally in a jeweled support. But the friction was very small, since, by arresting shaft s suddenly, disk would generally rotate something like 100 times or more before stopping, and such improvements were thought unnecessary. The ver- tical position was, however, chosen it was much more for purposes of observation. In to re- duce weight of disk as much as possible, a consisting of a circular rim with narrow spokes, was cut out of thin aluminum sheet, and black paper glued on the frame-all marks and divisions of former being, of course, white. I found it convenient to draw concentric cir- cles a number of marks such that all vibrations within the of apparatus could read In addition, a segmental piece hard rubber N, supported on a T and properly marked, was used to read fractions or, respec- tively, take corrections for any irregularity the rotation during a prolonged period of the disk was placed a vacuum tube or, in place, an adjustable spark gap I, which was to the secondary of a small trans- former, the primary which was positively controlled by the mechanical or electromagnetic system the vibrations of which were to determined. In preparing a spring the desired period vibration for one of the instruments scribed, for the spring was provisorily mounted on the instrument and the latter put in operation. The disk, in- termittently illuminated by the discharges of the secondary was released from the pendulum and rotated until syn- chronism was attained, the revolutions being computed by observing the white mark m. The constants of the spring were modified a simple calculation from the first result, and in the trial, as a the vibration was so as to enable use of the escapement, the adjustment being completed, generally by altering the weight of the hammer on the spring until marks on disk, by the normal speed rotation, appeared stationary in space. 66 THE STREAMS OF LENARD Al'-'D ROENTGEN The apparatus described in convenient and saving in a many lines of mentation. By means of the same, it is practicable to rotate a body of weight with uniform and adjustable velocity, and it itself to the operation of circuit con- trollers, curve and all kinds of such devices. It will found most in tracing current or electromotive- curves of will afford mate- help in a most valuable use in the tions is, perhaps, the purpose determining angular velocities of dynamos, particularly of Among the various quantities which, in alternate-current ex- practice, one to determine fre- quently, there are some, which even a laboratory or shop in the midst of disturbances a or can ascertained with sufficient precision, while there are others which can be only approximated, particularly if, as is very often the case, practical methods of measure must resort- ed to. So, for example, the close measurement of resistances no nor does that currents tive forces, although the exactitude is ne(:es~;;an smaller; but in determining one is to make a considerable error, still a one in measuring induc- tances, and probably the estimating In many such crude as speed counters or tachometers are still resorted the experimenter is dis- appointed to that of long and painstaking tests is impaired to deter- mine exactly frequency. often too, latter is the and most important quanti- ty. In view of these facts, a description of the method adopt- ed by me determination angular may be some The commonly are illustrated diagrammati- cally in a and b. On shaft S, a, of the generator fastened a commutator or controller C, provided with any suitable number of eight being SECTION I 67 ~ til ~.;.:.:. <1/ E ~ b .Stil ..... 0 ;:: 0 ~ ;<:I:I ~ .... <' s·S <1/ -;til Q.. .§ ..... 0 "C 0 tl ':5 ::<;1;/ I ~.... ....o.....il shown in this instance. Four of these, 1, 3, 5, and 7 serve to establish the connections of the circuits, while the intermediate ones, 2, 4, 6, and 8 are entirely insulated, idle seg- ments. Assuming the generator to be an alternate-current machine, the terminals tl t2 of the armature winding, or of any desired coil or part of the same, are led through the hollow shaft, as may be the case, and connected to the diametri- cally opposite segments 3 and 7, while the segments situated at right angles, that is 1 and 5, are connected together through a wire w of inappreciable resistance. Two brushes bl b2 , supported in an ordinary holder allowing their being shifted in any position, are arranged to bear upon the periphery of the controller C. These brushes are connected to a 68 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN circuit primary coil p, induction and denser. c of proper capacity and a turns of very small selfin series with the con- The operation of fore referred to. When, brushes bl bz are 1 and 3, the condenser is adjusted at will by shifting retains a certain charge until upon the connected latory discharge result of inducing s, which momentarily I placed in proximity uniform velocity, as before the circuit controller, the tact wi th the J peated, at complete a definite number of impulses uum tube or spark be only two' but any greater number be the number of the segments and manner. It should be stated that current pass into the condenser whenever the those segments which are connected to dinarily produce no appreciable This might be the case if the very large and would then be at once justment of the circuit through which charges is, of course, preferable but not sary. When it is inconvenient to use armature lustrated in Fig. 14 a, then the controller Cis two sliding rings r1 rz, Fig. 14 b, bear two additional brushes b3 b4• nected to a direct-current source as which are preferably through a self-induction SECTION I 69 to to a higher potentiaL The '1 '2 merel y to the segments 1 and 3 current charg- ing the condenser, otherwise nothing be changed on the 1"1.0," "'I'> The marks or divisions on periphery the disk D are suitably so that by normal speed of the genera- appear stationary in space, being the case, the may be at once and easily computed from the number segments on the controller and that of divisions on the disk and from the speed of the iatteJ: The frequency of dynamo currents is then by taking into consideration the of availing himself of this method, the experimenter can get the accurate value for angular velocity, no matter how much the speed of the dynamo may vary, if he only the precaution to his readings for electromotive etc" at instant the on the disk are stationary. Should the consume more time, It IS easy to take the for any variation by simply observing, with to a fixed line on rubber piece N, the number of divisions which are to added or uo;:;\~u\,.u;;;u from, the of disk. Section I Addendum TELEGRt\PHY METHODS; IN ELECTRICAL OSCILLATORS; VACUUM BULBS. lecture was not completed The and ",;"},,",e:u. in the lec- ture on subject of telegraphy re- methods, an extension his presenta- tion on novel high measurement were considered too revealing in terms of patent applications in progress. The following Addendum section is derived from Section IX, IIArrangements for receiving," Nikola Tesla On His Work With Alternating and is believed to summarize his re- on this "The [of the instrument shown in Section I, Fig. 13 cut] was intended to produce an absolutely constant rotation so that certain intervals of could be definitely fixed, and in to these of time I could ana- lyze the waves... The bottom of [Fig. shows vacuum designed for currents. They were secondary transformer and illuminated the I used, for' two vibrations of different then there was a and I would notice, as this rotated, the marked travel one way or the other. When synchronism was obtained, lines appeared stationary. "I am now showing [Fig. 15, top] a [drawing of a] for telephonic and telegraphic I used in my laboratory on [left! is a transmitter ... , [below] is an inductance which is bridged by a such as by speaking into it, or it by hand or otherwise, variations in the intensity of the waves are produced. 72 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN fig. 15. Devices for receiving. "On the receiver side [right] I have my antenna and selfinductance coil connected to the ground, and in the secondary I have a wire which is under a tension. Another wire, likewise under tension, controls two microphonic contacts or carbons. The tension of this wire is adjustable, and as I will show in another drawing, I can regulate the pressure of the contacts so that a certain current from a battery, here, will flow through this primary coil. "When the transmitted oscillations are controlled and produce corresponding variations in the intensity of the received effects, then the current generated in [the secondary of the receiver] heats that wire more or less and the alternate heating and cooling of the latter results in periodic expansions and contractions vary[ing] the microphonic pressure of the contacts in obedience to the changes produced in the transmitter. In the secondary [of the transformer], I have a telephone [receiver] specially wound to reproduce the speech... " "My transmitter was on Houston Street and I would take the receiver with me. For instance, I would take a few toy balloons, go on the roof, and then put my box there with the instruments and listen to the signals. SECTION I - ADDENDUM 73 "This [Fig. 15, bottom] is another [drawing of a] device which I also used with success, but not telephonic. It operated on the principle of the Reis air thermometer ... [I]n the bulb is a resistance wire which is heated and cooled, owing to the fluctuations of the received currents. The attendant expansions and contractions of the air operate a little mercury column, pushing it back and forth. Curiously enough, for receiving telegraphic signals, this crude instrument was certainly good, but of course it was not suited for telephonic reception. "That[shown in Fig. 16] ... illustrates a way of producing audible notes by reaction of the received impulses upon a magnetic field . [At upper left] is a transmitter, diagrammatically represented, with an arrangement for varying the intensity of the waves emitted, and on the receiver side I have, as you see, a grounded antenna. [The] secondary [has a conductor under tension in] a very powerful magnetic field, and [the reaction of] this conductor, traversed by the received currents in the field, causes the conductor to emit audible notes. o __._.__ .(~J ~'--I:=~_~_J=t---Q Me) Fig. 16. Other Ways of receiving. "I [have] several magnets of various forms, like this [Fig. 16, center], and employed a cord in the field, which, when the current traversed it, vibrated and established a contact. Or, I [use] a small coil... through which the current 74 TIIE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN was passed, and which by its vibrations produced the signal, an audible note, or anything else ... [I]n my writings ... I had already shown the reaction of the high frequency and low frequency currents on magnetic fields, and had specified the frequencies within which one has to keep in order to receive efficiently audible notes." In addition to the electrical oscillator unit shown in Fig. 9, Section I, Tesla also exhibited two other units. The first is shown in Fig. 17 which was covered by a patent applied for nine months earlier.49 A second is shown in Fig. 18 an advance look at a form of oscillator utilizing one of a series of eight hermetically-sealed, mercury circuit controllers for which patents were applied beginning the following two months. This unit was covered by a patent applied for eight months later.5O Fig. 17 Fig. 18 These units were described by Tesla the following way years later as presented for the lecture. 49 U.S. Patent No. 568,179 of Sept. 22, 1896, "Method and Apparatus for Producing Currents of High Frequency," application filed July 6, 1896. 50 U.S. Patent No. 609,245 of Aug. 16, 1898, "Electrical-Circuit Controller," application filed Dec. 2, 1897 SECTION I ADDENDUM 75 "[The unit in 17] a oscillator ... tended for production Roentgen rays, and scientific research in general. It comprises a box containing two condensers of the same capacity on which are supported the charging coil and transformer. auto- matic circuit controller, hand switch and connecting posts are mounted on the front plate of the inductance spool as is also one of the contact springs. The box is equipped with three terminals, the two external ones serving merely for connection while middle one carries a contact bar WIth a screw for regulating the interval during which the circuit is closed. The vibrating spring itself, the func- tion of which is to cause periodic interruptions, can be ad- justed in strength as well as distance from the core the center the charging coil by screws visible on the top plate so that any desired conditions of mechanical con- trol might be secured. The primary coil of the transformer is of copper sheet and taps are made at suitable points for the purpose of varying, at will, the number of turns. The induc- tance coil is wound two to adapt the instrument both to llO and volt circuit"> and secondaries were provided to various wavelengths prima- ry. The output was approximately 500 watts with damped waves 50,000 cycles per second. short periods of time undamped oscillations were produced in screwing the vibrating spring tight against the iron core and separating the contacts by the adjustmg screw which performed the function of a key. "[The unit in Fig. illustrates a transformer with a ro- tary break. are two condensers of the same capacity in the box which can connected in or multiple. The charging inductarlCes are in the form of two long spools upon which are supported secondary A small direct-current motor, the speed of which can be with- wide limits, is employed to drive a specially make and In other the oscillator is like the one illustrated [at left] and operation will derstood from the This transformer was m my wireless experiments fre~uently for lighting laboratory by my vacuum " I 51 "Electrical " Electrical 259-260, 276, 276. 76 TIlE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN "[I now show on the wall of this Academy drawings of] a great variety of bulbs I used. Every one that you see was built, not in one, but in several forms ... Among these bulbs I have a great number of receiving devices .... " --- , """: ----: ) 13 • .-t I ~ -- -- . ~ , .~ i ... ... . . ... . '" -c- SECTION I - ADDENDUM 77 ,- I . \~ '" ~ ,? ' v ~- '" .- .. t"::!",,, ~ - 78 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN .. ~ .~ = .- " ,gg u ....... (- ... t· . .: . ( - -,=~-: C iZ"-, I b1- c..:( 0 (. '~--_ ~ 1L_ __ ' \......=: ' ~.* " < " I oJ ' - SECTION I - ADDENDUM 79 - -1 ..~ ....... ~ ~ ~.' " . ~~~ ., - ...J-41-1/'"" 'j .. ,~ IJ T 0 ~, j~ ~. i ' .J T. , , " I ..; U >..... 80 THE STREAMS OF LENARD AND ROENTGEN ~ F . - ( "" S. ~. -=E)~ ... . .... ~- b'" ..... ~ ..-'.- " . l . C r - .~ . / " I t .. - J- It SECTION I - ADDENDUM 81 ·. " , ,'4 ..... - . --- - (, " ... Sa " ~ ~ ~.~ ~ " -' .. --, ,~--:~ " ~ " --. " ...-' " _m:=: - .. E: .-.-..;$ " -' Section II THE HlJR1FUL ACTIONS OF LENARD AND the Editor Electrical Review: The extending use the Lenard Roentgen or bulbs as implements of physician, or as instruments of research in laboratories, makes it desir- particularly view possibility of certain hurtful actions on human to investigate the nature of influences, to ascertain the conditions under which they are to occur and --what is most important for practitioner- to render all injury impossible by the vance certain the employment unfailing reme- dies. As I have in a previous communication to your es- journal (see Electrical Review of December 2, 1896), no experimenter need be from using freely the Roentgen rays of a poisonous or deleterious ac- tion, and It is entirely wrong to give room to expressions of a such as tend to impede the and create a against an already highly and more promising discovery; but it cannot be denied that it is equally uncommendable to ignore dangers now when we know that, under certain circumstances, they actually exist. I consider it the more necessary to be aware these dangers, as I see coming into general use of novel apparatus, capable of developing rays of incomparable power. In scien- tific laboratories the instruments are usually in the hands of persons in their manipulation and capable of approxi- mately estimating the magnitude effects, the omis- sion of precautions in the present state of our knowledge, not so much to be apprehended; but the physi- cians, who are keenly appreciating the benefits de- rived from the proper application of the new principle, and numerous amateurs who are by the beauty of the novel manifestations, who are passionately bent upon