Various Tesla book cover images

Nikola Tesla Books

Books written by or about Nikola Tesla

June 25

The device shown in the drawing was intended to amplify the vibrations, in the following way: some of the power driving cylinder A is converted by friction of brush b against A into vibrations of b. Since the friction is a function of the current in the electromagnet, the vibrations of b have a time variation similar to the time variations of the current. If the circuit of the electromagnet includes a microphone and a battery, then the device should amplify the speech signal, brush b vibrating in synchronization with the speech pressure but with much more energy. This amplified signal could be used in a modulator (see June 13th and 14th). The drawing shown on p. 405 (from Tesla's slide in Nikola Tesla Museum, Belgrade) illustrates how Tesla thought of implementing some of these ideas*.

June 26

The principle of this device using high voltages to separate gases would be that the molecules (in fact ions) of the different gases would behave differently because of their different mass: charge ratios. It is not known whether Tesla tried to verify this idea experimentally. In a later article(28) on electrical oscillators he mentions among the possible applications “formation of chemical compounds through fusion and combination; synthesis of gases; manufacture of ozone ...” but does not mention separation of gases, so that it may be he never went any further than the initial idea.

June 27

The transmitter (Figs. 1 and 2) and receiver (Fig. 3) having several tuned circuits, the transmitter generating several signals at different frequencies and the receiver responding only when all these signals act at the same time, were the subject of two patent applications filed 16 July 1900 (subsequently granted)(38).

This method allows much more selective reception than a single-frequency channel, and is much less sensitive to interference, and the signal can only be decoded by a special receiver. In his patent applications Tesla likens it to a lock which can only be opened when one knows the combination.

The entry of June 27th was subsequently brought in evidence in a dispute before the U.S. Patent Office about priority to the idea of a multi-frequency system(68). The back of the page bears the stamp “U.S. Patent Office, Nov. 1902".

June 28

Tesla considered that the self-capacity of the secondary winding was proportional to the number of turns and inversely proportional to the spacing between turns, so that the ratio of the distributed capacities of the new and the old coil is N1 d/N d1 (N - number of turns, d - spacing between turns).

The ratio of the inductance of the secondaries with different numbers of turns he finds from the relation

$! {{\left({N_{1} \over N}\right)^{2}} = {{\left({N_{1} \over N}\right)^{2}}{Nd \over Nd_{1}}} = {N_{1} d \over Nd_{1}}} $!

* It has not so far been established whether Tesla patented or tried to patent this modulator. It appears that the slide is a copy of a drawing intended for a patent application.

404

38

Tesla: “System of signaling", U.S. Patent 725 605, Apr. 14, 1903, Appl. July 16, 1900, P-337.

“Method of signaling", U.S. Patent 723 188, Mar. 17, 1903, Appl. June 14, 1901, P-352.

68

Testimony in behalf of Tesla, Interference No. 21,701, United States Patent Office, New York, 1902.

Glossary

Lowercase tau - an irrational constant defined as the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its radius, equal to the radian measure of a full turn; approximately 6.283185307 (equal to 2π, or twice the value of π).
A natural rubber material obtained from Palaquium trees, native to South-east Asia. Gutta-percha made possible practical submarine telegraph cables because it was both waterproof and resistant to seawater as well as being thermoplastic. Gutta-percha's use as an electrical insulator was first suggested by Michael Faraday.
The Habirshaw Electric Cable Company, founded in 1886 by William M. Habirshaw in New York City, New York.
The Brown & Sharpe (B & S) Gauge, also known as the American Wire Gauge (AWG), is the American standard for making/ordering metal sheet and wire sizes.
A traditional general-purpose dry cell battery. Invented by the French engineer Georges Leclanché in 1866.
Refers to Manitou Springs, a small town just six miles west of Colorado Springs, and during Tesla's time there, producer of world-renown bottled water from its natural springs.
A French mineral water bottler.
Lowercase delta letter - used to denote: A change in the value of a variable in calculus. A functional derivative in functional calculus. An auxiliary function in calculus, used to rigorously define the limit or continuity of a given function.
America's oldest existing independent manufacturer of wire and cable, founded in 1878.
Lowercase lambda letter which, in physics and engineering, normally represents wavelength.
The lowercase omega letter, which represents angular velocity in physics.