August 26
Tesla experimented with twice the interruption rate. The oscillator worked better and there was heavy sparking across the lightning arresters (Fig. 4). Investigating the cause of this sparking he inserted a coil in the lead of the metal sphere (Fig. 1) to reject high frequencies. In an earlier experiment (see July 30th) inserting such a choke coil in the ground line had stopped sparking across the arresters. This time it did not, so Tesla tried the circuit in Fig. 2. Still there was no marked change, the sparking across the arresters was only slightly reduced. After this experiment he began to wonder whether the grounding point of the secondary was not perhaps a peak rather than a node of the standing wave. It must be understood that Tesla thought that standing waves were set up around the transmitter (like waves on an open transmission line. With shorter waves the rate of change of amplitude with distance would be faster (i.e. maxima and minima would occur at shorter distance intervals), so he thought that a large potential difference could be obtained with a short distance between the grounding of the secondary and that of the lightning arrester.
In order to explain what happened when the sphere was not grounded (which would mean that there were no short waves) but the sparking across the arrester did not stop, Tesla found it necessary to formulate a new hypothesis: â Could the sparks be produced by static induction upon wire through the air and not chiefly by conduction through earth?â The experiment with which he tried to verify this hypothesis did not yield any definite answer.