Valdemar Poulsen

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Valdemar Poulsen
Valdemar Poulsen (c. 1898)
Born23 November 1869
Died23 July 1942(1942-07-23) (aged 72)
Gentofte, Denmark
NationalityDanish
OccupationEngineer
Engineering career
Projectsmagnetic wire recorder, arc converter radio transmitter

Valdemar Poulsen (23 November 1869 – 6 August 1942) was a

Poulsen arc, [1] which was used for a majority of the earliest audio radio transmissions, before being supplanted by the development of vacuum-tube transmitters.[2]

Early life

Poulsen was born on 23 November 1869 in

née Brandt).[4] He studied natural sciences at the University of Copenhagen from 1889 until 1893, but left before graduating to begin working as an assistant engineer at the technical department of the Copenhagen Telephone Company. Poulsen then left this position in order to work as an independent inventor.[3]

Recording innovations

Poulsen's magnetic wire recorder
Poulsen's 1900 US patent for a magnetic wire recorder
Poulsen's recording of the voice of Emperor
Franz Josef of Austria
"Telephonograph after Poulsen, for permanently fixing and conveniently repeating a telephonic conversation." From a 1911 catalog of physical apparatuses.

playback head, which may be the same as the recording head, can then pick up the changes in the magnetic field from the wire and convert them into an electrical current, that is reproduced as audio when connected to a telephone receiver.[6]

Poulsen obtained a Telegraphone patent in 1898, and with his assistant, Peder Oluf Pedersen, later developed other magnetic recorders that recorded on steel wire, tape, or disks. None of these devices had electronic amplification, but the recorded signal was strong enough to be heard through a headset or transmitted on telephone wires.[6]

At the 1900

Franz Josef of Austria which is believed to be the oldest surviving magnetic audio recording.[7]

It was anticipated that the Telegraphone would have numerous applications for dictation and recording telephone messages, and could also be used for making repeated announcements by telephone newspapers.[8] One enthusiastic reviewer, noting the 30 minute recording time and other features, predicted that "this instrument will mean almost as much to the business man and to the world at large as does the telephone itself".[9] However, its complexity and the lack of a means to amplify its recordings greatly limited its adoption, and the invention was financially unsuccessful.

Radio development

Poulsen developed an arc converter transmitter in 1903, referred to as the "Poulsen Arc Transmitter", which was widely used for audio radio transmissions before the advent of vacuum tube technology. This invention made modifications to William Duddell's "singing arc" in order to operate at much higher frequencies, which made it a generator of continuous radio waves, which, unlike earlier spark-gap transmisssins, could be used for audio transmissions. The most important modification was the introduction of an atmosphere containing hydrogen in a strong transverse magnetic field.[10]

In 1907 the system was able to communicate between Lyngby and Newcastle with a 100-foot (30m) mast.[11] In 1908 Poulsen telephoned 145 miles (230 km) without wires from Ejerg to Lyngby in Denmark, using only 3 kilowatts, and in 1910 telephoned 295 miles (475 km) from Los Angeles to San Francisco in the United States, using 12 kilowatts. Music played in the Poulsen station in Berlin was received 215 miles (345 km) away at Copenhagen.[12]

The Federal Telegraph Company, specializing in arc transmitters, licensed Poulsen's arc for use in the United States, although the company primarily employed high-powered arc transmitters for long distance radiotelegraph communication.[13]

Use of arc transmitters largely ceased in the early 1920s, supplanted by Alexanderson alternators used for long distance telegraphy, and vacuum-tube transmitters. In 1909, Einar Dessau used a shortwave transmitter to establish contact with Paulsen.[14][15] Beginning in 1907 Lee de Forest employed arc transmitters for early radio broadcasting experimentation,[16] but eventually switched to vacuum-tube transmitters. Recounting the superiority of vacuum-tube transmitters, in his 1950 autobiography de Forest wrote that he had been "totally unaware of the fact that in the little audion tube, which I was then using only as a radio detector, lay dormant the principle of oscillation which, had I but realized it, would have caused me to unceremoniously dump into the ash can all of the fine arc mechanisms which I had ever constructed, a procedure which a few years later actually took place all over the world!"[17]

Death and legacy

Poulsen died on 6 August 1942.[18] In 1907 he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Royal Danish Society for Science, and in 1909 an honorary Doctor of Philosophy degree from the University of Leipzig. He also received the Medal of Merit from the Danish government.[3] At his death he was a fellow of the Danish Academy of Sciences, the Danish Academy of Technical Science and the Swedish Institute for Engineering Research.[12]

A Danish stamp was issued marking the centennial of Poulsen's birth in 1969.[19]

The Valdemar Poulsen Gold Medal was awarded each year for outstanding research in the field of radio techniques and related fields by the Danish Academy of Technical Sciences [da]. The award was presented on 23 November, the anniversary of his birth, and Poulsen himself received the inaugural award in 1939. The award was discontinued in 1993.[20]

On 23 November 2018 he was honoured with a Google Doodle for his 149th birthday.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Wireless Telephony", Electrical World, December 8, 1906, page 1121.
  2. ^ Amateur Radio by Maurice J. Grainger, 1922, page 87.
  3. ^ a b c Denmark and the Danes by William J. Harvey and Christian Reppien, 1915, pages 233-239.
  4. ^ "Valdemar Poulsen" (genealogy)
  5. ^ Williams, Archibald (1904). The Romance of Modern Invention (3 ed.). Philadelphia; London: J. B. Lippinscott Company; C. Arthur Pearson, Ltd. Retrieved 20 October 2023.
  6. ^ a b c "Recording Telephones", Nature, August 16, 1900, pages 371-373.
  7. .
  8. ^ "Notes From the Continent of Europe: The Use of the Telegraphone in Telephony" by Dr. Alfred Gradenwitz, Telephone Magazine, May 1904, pages 183-184.
  9. ^ "The Telegraphone" by A. F. Collins, Cyclopedia of Applied Electricity, 1909, pages 429-444.
  10. ^ "Wireless Course in Twenty Lessons" by H. W. Secor, S. Gernsback and A. Lescarboura, 1912, pages 54-56.
  11. ^ "The Poulsen 'Wireless'". The Graphic. January 12, 1907. p. 62. Retrieved 11 September 2015.
  12. ^ a b "Valdemar Poulsen", Radio's 100 Men of Science by Orrin E. Dunlap, Jr., 1944, pages 173-175.
  13. ^ "The Federal Telegraph Co. of California and the Poulsen Arc Transmitter", History of Communications-electronics in the United States by Captain L. S. Howeth, 1963, pages 142-147.
  14. ^ "First Broadcast by Ham Radio Operator". 18 March 2013.
  15. ^ "Johan E. Nyrop". 18 July 2011.
  16. ^ "Music By Wireless Telephone", New-York Daily Tribune, March 7, 1907, page 4.
  17. ^ Father of Radio by Lee de Forest, 1950, page 242.
  18. ^ "Valdemar Poulsen Dies; Noted Danish Inventor", (Washington, D.C.) Evening Star, August 7, 1942, page B-4.
  19. ^ "Postage stamp Denmark 1969 Valdemar Poulsen, Engineer" by laufer.
  20. ^ Knudsen, Henrik (2012). VISIONER, VIDEN OG VÆRDISKABELSE – EN HISTORIE OM AKADEMIET FOR DE TEKNISKE VIDENSKABER [VISIONS, KNOWLEDGE AND VALUE CREATION - A HISTORY OF ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING SCIENCES] (PDF) (in Danish). p. 130. .
  21. ^ Valdemar Poulsen's 149th Birthday

External links