WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY
TELEGRAPHING WITHOUT WIRES.-Wireless
telegraphy is an outgrowth of the ordinary telegraph
system. When Maxwell, and, later on, Hertz, discovered
that electricity, magnetism, and light were transmitted
through the ether, and that they differed only in their
wave lengths, they laid the foundations for wireless
telegraphy. Ether is a substance which is millions
and millions of times lighter than air, and it pervades
all space. It is so unstable that it is constantly
in motion, and this phase led some one to suggest
that if a proper electrical apparatus could be made,
the ether would thereby be disturbed sufficiently
so that its impulses would extend out a distance proportioned
to the intensity of the electrical agitation thereby
created.
SURGING CHARACTER OF HIGH-TENSION
CURRENTS.-When a current of electricity
is sent through a wire, hundreds of miles in length,
the current surges back and forth on the wire many
thousands of times a second. Light comes to us
from the sun, over 90,000,000 of miles, through the
ether. It is as reasonable to suppose, or infer,
that the ether can, therefore, convey an electrical
impulse as readily as does a wire.
It is on this principle that impulses
are sent for thousands of miles, and no doubt they
extend even farther, if the proper mechanism could
be devised to detect movement of the waves so propagated.
THE COHERER.-The instrument
for detecting these impulses, or disturbances, in
the ether is generally called a coherer, although
detector is the term which is most satisfactory.
The name coherer comes from the first practical instrument
made for this purpose.
HOW MADE.-The coherer is
simply a tube, say, of glass, within which is placed
iron filings. When the oscillations surge through
the secondary coil the pressure or potentiality of
the current finally causes it to leap across the small
space separating the filings and, as it were, it welds
together their edges so that a current freely passes.
The bringing together of the particles, under these
conditions, is called cohering.
Fi shows the simplest form of
coherer. The posts (A) are firmly affixed to
the base (B), each post having an adjusting screw (C)
in its upper end, and these screw downwardly against
and serve to bind a pair of horizontal rods (D), the
inner ends of which closely approach each other.
These may be adjusted so as to be as near together
or as far apart as desired. E is a glass tube
in which the ends of the rods (D) rest, and between
the separated ends of the rods (D) the iron filings
(F) are placed.
THE DECOHERERS.-For the
purpose of causing the metal filings to fall apart,
or decohere, the tube is tapped lightly, and this is
done by a little object like the clapper of an electric
bell.
In practice, the coils and the parts
directly connected with it are put together on one
base.
THE SENDING APPARATUS.-Fi shows a section of a coil with its connection in
the sending station. The spark gap rods (A) may
be swung so as to bring them closer together or farther
apart, but they must not at any time contact with
each other.
The induction coil has one terminal
of the primary coil connected up by a wire (B) with
one post of a telegraph key, and the other post of
the key has a wire connection (C), with one side of
a storage battery. The other side of the battery
has a wire (D) running to the other terminal of the
primary.
The secondary coil has one of its
terminals connected with a binding post (E).
This binding post has an adjustable rod with a knob
(F) on its end, and the other binding post (G), which
is connected up with the other terminal of the secondary
coil, carries a similar adjusting rod with a knob
(H).
From the post (E) is a wire (I), which
extends upwardly, and is called the aerial wire, or
wire for the antennæ, and this wire also connects
with one side of the condenser by a conductor (J).
The ground wire (K) connects with the other binding
post (G), and a branch wire (L) also connects the
ground wire (K) with one end of the condenser.
THE RECEIVING APPARATUS.-The
receiving station, on the other hand, has neither
condenser, induction coil, nor key. When the apparatus
is in operation, the coherer switch is closed, and
the instant a current passes through the coherer and
operates the telegraph sounder, the galvanometer indicates
the current.
Of course, when the coherer switch
is closed, the battery operates the decoherer.
HOW THE CIRCUITS ARE FORMED.-By
referring again to Fi, it will be seen that when
the key is depressed, a circuit is formed from the
battery through wire B to the primary coil, and back
again to the battery through wire D. The secondary
coil is thereby energized, and, when the full potential
is reached, the current leaps across the gap formed
between the two knobs (F, H), thereby setting up a
disturbance in the ether which is transmitted through
space in all directions.
It is this impulse, or disturbance,
which is received by the coherer at the receiving
station, and which is indicated by the telegraph sounder.