Timeline of radio

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The timeline of radio lists within the history of radio, the technology and events that produced instruments that use radio waves and activities that people undertook. Later, the history is dominated by programming and contents, which is closer to general history.

Origins and developments

Although development of the first radio wave communication system is attributed to

Heinrich Rudolf Hertz.[1]

1887 experimental setup of Hertz's apparatus.
  • 1886 to 1888: After noticing how discharging an electric current into a coil produced a spark in a second nearby coil, Heinrich Hertz sees a way to build a test apparatus to solve von Helmholtz "Berlin Prize" problem. Hertz conducts a series of experiments that validates Maxwell's theory of electromagnetic radiation and proves that it can travel through free space (radio). He demonstrates the radiation has the properties of visible light, the properties of waves (now called Transverse waves), and discovers that the electromagnetic equations could be reformulated into a partial differential equation called the wave equation.
  • Spring 1888: British physicist Sir Oliver Lodge conducts experiments that seem to show electromagnetic waves traveling along wires. He took this as a way to prove Maxwell's electromagnetic theory but learns of Hertz' published proofs at the same time.
  • 1885 to 1892: Murray, Kentucky farmer Nathan Stubblefield conducts wireless transmissions some claim to be radio, but his devices seem to have worked by induction transmission rather than radio transmission.
  • 1890: French physicist and inventor
    Edouard Branly does a thorough investigation of metal filings in an evacuated tube and how they are sensitive to electric sparks at a distance, an effect later to be called the coherer
    by Lodge.
  • 1891: Irish physicist Frederick Thomas Trouton suggests using a fast rotating alternator as a wireless transmitter and that the new "Hertzian waves" could be used to replace light houses with "electric houses" that would operate in fog.[16][17]
  • February 1892: British chemist and physicist William Crookes publishes an article suggesting "Hertzian waves" (radio waves) could be, and he claimed already were being used in wireless telegraphy.[18]
  • July 1892: Elihu Thompson writes that "signalling or telegraphing for moderate distances without wires, and even through dense fog may be an accomplished fact soon".[16]
  • 1892: Branly's filing tube comes to light when it is described by Dr. Dawson Turner at a meeting of the British Association in Edinburgh.[19][20]
  • 1892: Scottish electrical engineer and astronomer George Forbes suggests Branly's filing tube may react in the presence of Hertzian waves.
  • 1893: Nikola Tesla delivers a lecture "On Light and other High Frequency Phenomena" before the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia and the National Electric Light Association St Louis. Dubious of the existence air-borne radio waves,[21] he proposes a wireless lighting and wireless electric power transmission system that would work on air and ground conduction. He also notes the system could carry messages.[22][23][24]
  • March 1893: American physicist Amos Dolbear predicts telegraphing without wires using "A beam of Hertzian rays" in Donahoe's Magazine.[16]
  • 1893: Physicist W. B. Croft exhibits Branly's experiments at a meeting of the Physical Society in London. It is unclear to Croft and others whether the filings in the Branly filing tube are reacting to sparks or the light from the sparks. George Minchin notices the [Branly] tube may be reacting to Hertzian waves the same way his solar cell does and writes the paper "The Action of Electromagnetic Radiation on Films containing Metallic Powders".[19][20] These papers are read by Lodge who sees a way to build a much improved Herzian wave detector.
  • 1893: Irish physicist George Francis FitzGerald publishes a formula for the radiating power of electromagnetic waves from a loop antenna that seems to show these (radio) waves would only ever have a useful range of 1/2 mile, a value Oliver Lodge agrees with.[25]
  • 1 January 1894:
    Heinrich Rudolf Hertz
    dies.
  • 1 June 1894: Oliver Lodge delivers a memorial lecture on Hertz where he demonstrates the optical properties of "Hertzian waves" (radio), including transmitting them over a short distance, using an improved version of Branly's filing tube, which Lodge has named the "coherer", as a detector. He also demonstrates controlling frequency by changing inductance and capacitance in his circuits.[18]
  • November 1894: Building on Lodge's published work, Indian physicist
    Jagdish Chandra Bose, sets up a small laboratory at Presidency Collage, Calcutta
    to explore radio microwave optics.
  • December 1894: In Italy, Guglielmo Marconi conducts experiments in pursuit of building a wireless telegraph system based on Herzian waves (radio), demonstrated a radio transmitter and receiver to his mother, a set-up that made a bell ring on the other side of the room by pushing a telegraphic button on a bench.[26][27] Financed by his family, over the next year he works on adapting experimental equipment into a radio wave telegraphic transmitter and receiver system that could work over long distances.[28] This is considered to be the first development of a radio system specifically for communication.[29]
  • May 1895: After reading about Lodge's demonstrations, the Russian physicist
    Alexander Popov builds a "Hertzian wave" (radio wave) based lightning detector using a coherer
    .
  • November 1895: Jagdish Chandra Bose sets up a demonstration of radio microwave at the Town Hall in
    Calcutta where he ignites gunpowder in a nearby room and rings a bell.[30]
  • 1896: Alexander Popov demonstrates the transmission of signals between buildings at the University of St. Petersburg.
  • 1896: Marconi was awarded a patent for radio with British Patent 12039, Improvements in Transmitting Electrical Impulses and Signals and in Apparatus There-for. This is the initial patent for radio-based wireless telegraphy.
  • 1896: Bose goes to London on a lecture tour and meets Marconi, who was conducting wireless experiments for the British post office.
  • 1897: Marconi establishes a radio station on the Isle of Wight, England.
  • 1897: Tesla applies for several wireless power patents in the U.S. (issued in early 1900).
  • 1897: Although Australia's first officially recognised broadcast was made in 1906, some sources claim that there were transmissions in Australia in 1897, either conducted solely by Professor William Henry Bragg of Adelaide University[31][32] or by Prof. Bragg in conjunction with G.W. Selby of Melbourne.[33]
  • 1898: Marconi opened the first radio factory, on Hall Street,
    Chelmsford, England
    , employing around 50 people.
  • 1899: Bose announced his invention of the "iron-mercury-iron coherer with telephone detector" in a paper presented at Royal Society, London.
  • 1899: Tesla experiments with wireless power in Colorado Springs. He listens to static from thunderstorms trying to determine values for what he believes is a native electrical charge and frequency of the Earth. Using sensitive electromagnetic receivers[34] he picks up repeating signals he thinks may be from beings on another planet. An alternative explanation is that Tesla may have heard Marconi's wireless telegraphy demonstrations in Europe.
  • 1900: Reginald Fessenden makes a weak transmission of voice over the airwaves.
  • July 1901: Tesla begins construction of his Wardenclyffe Tower wireless transmission facility. The project runs out of funding by 1905 and is never completed.
  • December 1901:
    Newfoundland a radio signal transmitted from Poldhu in Cornwall
    (UK).
  • February 1902: Marconi starts conducting more organized and documented tests sailing on board the SS Philadelphia west from Great Britain recording signals sent daily from the Poldhu station showing reception up to 2,100 miles (3,400 km).
  • December 1902: the Marconi station in Glace Bay, Nova Scotia, Canada, transmits the first signal from North America back to Great Britain.
  • 1904: The U.S. Patent Office reverses its decision, awarding Marconi a patent for the invention of radio.
  • 1906: In Australia,
    Amalgamated Wireless (Australasia) conducts an isolated experiment in which music was broadcast
    .

Spark-gap telegraphy

Using various

American Telephone and Telegraph operated until 1983, owning all of its own equipment and refusing to communicate with non-Marconi equipped ships. Around the turn of the century, the Slaby-Arco wireless system was developed by Adolf Slaby and Georg von Arco (later incorporated into Telefunken
).

A spark-gap transmitter for generating radio frequency electromagnetic waves. Such devices served as the transmitters for most early wireless systems.

Audio broadcasting (1915 to 1950s)

Ad for an Atwater Kent radio receiver in the Ladies' Home Journal (September, 1926)

Later 20th-century developments

  • 1954: Regency introduced a pocket transistor radio, the TR-1, powered by a "standard 22.5V Battery".
  • 1960: Sony introduced their first transistorized radio, small enough to fit in a vest pocket, and able to be powered by a small battery. It was durable, because there were no tubes to burn out. Over the next twenty years, transistors displaced tubes almost completely except for very high power or very high frequency uses.
  • Early 1960s: VOR systems finally became widespread; before that, aircraft used commercial AM radio stations for navigation. (AM stations are still marked on U.S. aviation charts).
  • 1963: Color television was commercially transmitted, and the first (radio)
    communication satellite
    , TELSTAR, was launched.
  • In the late 1960s, the U.S. long-distance telephone network began to convert to a digital network, employing digital radios for many of its links.
  • 1970s: LORAN became the premier radio navigation system. Soon, the U.S. Navy experimented with satellite navigation.
  • 1987: The
    GPS
    constellation of satellites was launched.
  • Early 1990s: Amateur radio experimenters began to use personal computers with audio cards to process radio signals.
  • 1994: The U.S. Army and
    software radio
    that could become a different radio on the fly by changing software.
  • Late 1990s: The digital transmissions began to be applied to broadcasting.

Telex on radio

Teletypewriters automated encoding, and were adapted to pulse-code dialing to automate routing, a service called telex
. For thirty years, telex was the absolute cheapest form of long-distance communication, because up to 25 telex channels could occupy the same bandwidth as one voice channel. For business and government, it was an advantage that telex directly produced written documents.

Telex systems were adapted to short-wave radio by sending tones over

R.44 (the most advanced pure-telex standard) incorporated character-level error detection and retransmission as well as automated encoding and routing. For many years, telex-on-radio (TOR) was the only reliable way to reach some third-world countries. TOR remains reliable, though less-expensive forms of e-mail are displacing it. Many national telecom companies historically ran nearly pure telex networks for their governments, and they ran many of these links over short wave radio.

See also

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ "The Opposite Directions of the Two Electricities Proved by the Appearances of the Electric Light in Vacuo", Lectures on Natural and Experimental Philosophy by the Late George Adams (volume 4), 1807, page 307.
  3. ^ a b Lindell, pp. 258–261
  4. ^ "Luigi Galvani". Bologna University web site for Science Communication (scienzagiovane.unibo.it). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  5. S2CID 224845756
    .
  6. ^ "Electrical Conductivity in Granular Media and Branly's Coherer: A Simple Experiment" by Eric Falcon and Bernard Castaing, February 2, 2008, page 1 (arxiv.org)
  7. ^ a b J. A. Fleming (1911) An Elementary Manual of Radiotelegraphy and Radiotelephony, p. 181
  8. ^ "Henry & Radio". Princeton University (princeton.edu). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  9. ^ Lindell, p. 260
  10. ^ Carlson (2003), p. 59
  11. ^ "Etheric Force". Engineering and Technology History Wiki (ethw.org). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  12. ^ Carlson (2003), pp. 57–58
  13. ^ Carlson (2003), p. 60
  14. ^ "Means for Transmitting Signals Electrically", U.S. Patent 465,971, issued December 29, 1891 to Thomas Edison (edison.rutgers.edu)
  15. ^ a b c d "Radio at Sea (1891–1922)". (earlyradiohistory.us). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  16. ^ "Alternator-Transmitter Development (1891–1922)". (earlyradiohistory.us). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  17. ^ .
  18. ^
  19. ^ .
  20. ^ Carlson (2013), p. 127
  21. ^ Carlson (2013), pp. H-45, 301
  22. ^ Lindell, p. 263
  23. ^ Guglielmo Marconi, Padre della Radio (radiomarconi.com) Retrieved on 12 July 2012.
  24. ^ Antony Brown (1969) Great Ideas in Communications. D. White Co., p. 141
  25. .
  26. ^ "Marconi Wireless T. Co. of America v. U.S. (1943)". June 21, 1943. Retrieved 2012-04-23.
  27. ^ IEEE Global History Network (2011). "Jagadish Chandra Bose". IEEE History Center. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  28. ^ "Time Line – Establishment of Wireless Institute of Australia (wia.org.au)
  29. ^ Bernard Harte (2002) When Radio Was The Cat's Whiskers, privately published Dural, New South Wales
  30. ^ Mimi Colligan (1991) Golden Days of Radio, Australia Post
  31. ^ Corum, Kenneth L.; Corum, James F. (2003). "Tesla's Colorado Spring Receivers" (PDF). Tesla Memorial Society of New York. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  32. ^ Father of Radio by Lee de Forest, 1950, p. 225.
  33. ^ "Reporting Yacht Races by Wireless Telephony", Electrical World, August 10, 1907, pp. 293–294. (archive.org)
  34. ^ .
  35. ^ "KDKA begins to broadcast". PBS. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  36. ^
    JSTOR 20795978
    .
  37. ^ .
  38. .
  39. ^ Thomas H. White (November 2012). "Nikola Tesla: The Guy Who DIDN'T 'Invent Radio'". (earlyradiohistory.us). Retrieved 11 December 2015.
  40. .

Cited sources

External links