How did Dr. Nikola Tesla denounce the accepted Hertz wave theory and how did he replace it by his own?
My professor wantedwants me to read and summarize any book of my choice. This made me search so I was looking in the library for a book that would interestwill interests me but sadly I didn’t find anything worthwhile. So I started to browse and search online for a book and finally, then I found several books on amazon.com. Owing to my interest in wireless technology, I found this book while I was searching for a book which has a small amount of pages, and I chose this book “The True Wireless”. one because I’m interesting in these kinds of books such as wireless technology.
TheThus, the publication of Dr. Heinrich Hertz’s experimental results created unprecedented excitement. Tesla explored those ideas byfor himself, using an apparatus he had constructed by him. Upon identification of the. Identifying limitations of the Hertz devices, Tesla concentrated on inventing one of his own, and by 1891 he had developed an apparatus that was “vastly superior.” He went to Bonn in 1892 to confer with Dr. Hertz, who seemed so “disappointed” that Tesla regretted making the trip.
Following severalIn 1900, following unsuccessful experiments, Tesla invented a wireless transmitter in 1900 which according to himthat he claimed produced “electro-magnetic power with magnitudeactivities of many million horse-powers”s of horse-power” but unfortunatelywhich he couldn’t was unable to prove that those were light-like vibrations. He also recounted that all the literature knowledge he had acquiredread on “Hertz-wave telegraphy” was had not convincing enoughconvinced him, and that although the history of science taughtteaches that each new truth helps to understand nature better, he felt that Dr. Hertz had not discovered a new truth but was merely supporting an already existing much earlier hypothesis. In Tesla’s view, Maxwell’s experimental “proof”, that the space waves generated by a periodic current through a circuit caused transversal vibrations had set back the development of wireless technology by twenty five years. However, Tesla admitted that the Hertz experiments had stimulated widespread interest.
An introduction to this book as published in The Electrical Experimenter, May 1919, described the content as athe “remarkable and complete story of his [Tesla’s] discovery of the ‘True Wireless’ based onand the principles of upon which transmission and reception.