Inventor of First Time Radio: Brief History of Radio Discovery
Posted by: Edy Flush September 10, 2017Reply
nalet.net - Radio is a technology used for sending signals by means of modulation and electromagnetic radiation (electromagnetic waves). These waves pass through, and propagate through the air, and may also travel through a vacuum of space, because they do not require a transport medium (such as an air molecule).
At the beginning of the radio was maritime, to transmit telegraph messages using Morse code between ships, and land. One of the earliest users including the Japanese Navy spied on the Russian fleet at the time of the Tsushima War in 1901. One of the most memorable uses was during the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, including communication between operators on drowned vessels, and nearby ships, and communications to the saved landline register station.
Radio Inventor and Brief History of Radio Discoveries
In 1894 Guglielmo Marconi was one who thought of how information could be sent to a person or group and company that needed information. And vice versa. With the limited information at the time was born Guglielmo Marconi thought to create a tool that can provide information and who can send information that is named by him Radio.
Guglielmo Marconi Born in 1874 in Bologna, at the age of adolescence he often read experiments conducted by Henrich Hertz. By reading these experiments he is very interesting to do that himself, he thinks with the existence of electromagnetic waves can be used to send signs across long distances without passing the wire.
By the time the Radio has succeeded he created, the experiment to transmit information is done on a ship in the middle of the sea. Then Guglielmo Marconi founded a company, the first time he sent the news in 1898. And the following year marconi created Radio again capable of sending news / information without the use of cable / wire.
The significance of his new invention achieved success in 1909 when the ship S.S. Republic damaged by collision and sink to the seafloor. Radio news is very helpful, all passengers can be saved except six people. That same year Marconi won the Nobel Prize for his invention. And the following year he managed to send radio news from Ireland to Argentina, a distance of more than 6000 miles.