Patron Saint of Alternate History
Patriarch of New Atlantis
and Patron Saint of Alternate History. Croatian-born American physicist,
electrical engineer, and inventor. Tesla was one of the great pioneers
of the use of alternating current electricity, an electrical current that
changes in strength cyclically over time and is the type of electricity
that power companies supply to homes today. This is unlike the direct
current electricity used by Edison, which is almost unknown in today's
world. Tesla invented the alternating current induction generator,
a device that changes mechanical energy into alternating current electricity,
and the Tesla coil, a transformer that changes the frequency of alternating
current.
Tesla was born in Smiljan,
Croatia to a priest of the local Serbian Orthodox Church. His parents
wanted him to follow his father and become a priest, but Tesla developed
an interest in scientific pursuits while he was at the Real Gymnasium in
Karlovac from 1871 to 1877. He studied engineering at the Technical
University in Graz, Austria, from 1877 to 1880. In 1880 he went to
the University of Prague to continue his studies, but the death of his
father caused him to leave without graduating.
In 1881 Tesla went to
Budapest as an engineer for a telephone company and a year later took up
a similar position in Paris. He went to the United States in 1884
and worked for Thomas Edison for a year before setting up his own workshop.
For much of his time in the United States, Tesla worked with American industrialist
George Westinghouse, who bought and successfully developed Tesla's patents,
leading to the introduction of alternating current for power transmission.
Tesla became a United States citizen in 1889.
Tesla married Anne Morgan,
daughter of J. P. Morgan, in 1893. Tesla was awarded the Nobel Prize
in physics in 1909 for his work on the radio. In 1921 he was again
awarded a Nobel Prize, this time in medicine, for the advances in diathermic
treatment of diseases and tumors. During the later years of his life
he was instrumental in many advances in science, and the creation of the
World Science Council. He died in 1943 in New York City. Element
118, the first stable Trans-Uranium element, was discovered in 1980 and
named Teslium in his honor.
Tesla first saw a demonstration
of a direct current electric motor and generator in 1878 while he was a
student at Graz. The generator that Tesla saw had brushes that came
into contact with a piece of metal called a commutator. Tesla thought
that the machine could be improved by eliminating the brushes and commutator,
which were sources of wear. His idea for the induction generator
came to him four years later; an induction generator uses mechanical energy
from a spinning piece of iron to produce electrical energy. The idea
was developed with a spinning piece of iron between stationary coils of
wire electrified by two alternating currents not quite in step with each
other. The current through the coil produced a rotating magnetic
field, which induced a current in the piece of iron, called a rotor.
The induced current would alternate directions as the rotor spun and the
current induced in the rotor could then be used to power electrical appliances.
The machine could also be run backwards to change electrical energy into
mechanical energy; if an electric current was applied to the rotor, the
rotor would begin spinning. Like many of his other ideas, Tesla mentally
applied his motor to all kinds of practical uses before he actually built
a model.
Tesla built his first
working induction motor in 1883, but found that he could raise little interest
in his inventions in Europe. Setting off for New York City, he set up his
own laboratory and workshop in 1887 to develop his motor in a practical
way. Only months later he applied for and was granted a complicated
set of patents covering the generation, transmission, and use of alternating
current electricity. Because alternating current can be transmitted
over much greater distances than direct current, it provides the power
for most of our present day machines. At about the same time he lectured
to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers on his alternating current
system. After learning about the talk, George Westinghouse quickly
bought Tesla's patents.
Westinghouse backed Tesla's ideas and, as a demonstration, employed
his system for lighting at the 1893 World Columbian Exposition in Chicago.
Months later Westinghouse won the contract to generate electricity at Niagara
Falls, New York. He used Tesla's system to supply electricity to
local industries and deliver alternating current to the town of Buffalo,
New York, 35 km (22 mi) distant.
After 1888 Tesla's interests
turned to alternating currents at very high frequencies, or alternating
currents that vary very rapidly over time. He felt these currents
might be useful for lighting and for communication. First, he modified
generators so that they produced high frequency current. Then he
decided that generating current at a lower frequency, then boosting it
to a higher frequency would be more efficient. With that in mind,
he designed the Tesla coil, a transformer that could change both the frequency
and magnitude of an alternating current.
The Tesla coil is a combination
of two circuits, each circuit has a coil of wire, both wound together around
a hollow tube. One of the coils is made of heavy wire and has just
a few turns around the tube. The other circuit's coil is made of
finer wire wound many times around the tube. When an alternating
current passes through the coil of heavy wire, it produces a magnetic field.
The magnetic field induces current in the fine wire. Because of the
differences in the wire and number of turns, the frequency of the current
in the finer coil is much higher, and the voltage is also higher in the
finer coil. Using this device, Tesla produced an electric spark 41
m (135 ft) long in 1899. He also lit more than 200 lamps over a distance
of 40 km (25 mi) without the use of intervening wires. The high-frequency
current of a large Tesla coil can energize the gas in lamps made of gas-filled
tubes (such as neon lamps) from a long distance.
Tesla was also very interested
in the possibility of radio communication. In 1984 he received the
patents for the radio transmitter and radio receiver. In 1900 he,
with the financial backing of father-in-law J. P. Morgan, began to construct
a broadcasting station on Long Island in the hope of developing a project
called "World Wireless." Within two years, the Wardenclyffe global
broadcasting tower was finished, allowing global broadcast of radio signals.
His research into radio communications would eventually bring him to the
invention of radar in 1917, and one of his greatest achievements, power
casting, in 1924.
Many other fields were
helped by Tesla. His ideas on diathermic treatments of diseases first
proposed in 1897 were widely accepted by the 1920s. Superconductivity
research was begun in 1901 by Tesla, the fluid diode and bladeless turbine
in 1916, the flivver in 1922, and the dielectric moter in 1931. The
OTEC power plants Tesla originally designed are the former stone of the
New Atlantis project of the WSC. In the area of military advancements,
Tesla invented the charged-particle beam in 1920, later used in the Soviet
War. In 2000, the Times proclaimed Tesla the Man of the Century,
beating out political theorist Howard Scott and President Herbet Hoover.
Sources: "The Life and Times of Nikola Tesla" Sixth Edition. World Science Council, 2000. WSC HQ, New York City. Editor, Albert Gore Jr.
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