This 1958 Soviet stamp celebrated Radio, May 7. |
We
think we know with certainty the inventor of many of the devices that transformed the world in
the span of about 100 years from an agricultural and muscle—human or animal—powered
society little changed for millennia. But often things are less clear than our tidy
history texts would have it. Many technologies like the automobile or television have multiple
creators any one of which could be credited
depending on what is defined as
critical to the modern devise. Sometimes the same results were obtained earlier
than generally credited using technology that was ultimately ignored or abandoned. Sometimes the
time is simply right and all of the groundwork has been laid so that
individuals make the same breakthroughs almost simultaneously and completely
independently. Who gets the credit might
be, as in the case of the telephone, who
wins the race to the patent office or
has the sharpest lawyers as was the case with more than one of Thomas Edison’s creations. Others might have gotten into the air before the Wright
Brothers, but only their invention led directly to a worldwide industry.
Then
there is the case of Alexander Stepanovich Popov who certainly built and demonstrated a gadget that
had all of the essential elements of a radio receiver but did not
at first conceive of its application as a communications device. The Russians, as they are wont to
do, proudly proclaim him as the inventor of the radio and celebrate
the anniversary of his presentation of a scientific paper
on May 7, 1895 as Radio Day.
Alexander Popov--Russia's claimant as the inventor of radio. |
Popov was born on March 16, 1859 the son of
an Orthodox priest in Krasnoturinsk,
Sverdlovs Oblast
in the Urals. Although interested in
science from an early age, his
father was determined to make him a priest and sent him to a seminary at the provincial capital of Yekaterinburg. But after completing his basic education he
rebelled and refused to continue on to theological
school. Instead in 1877 he enrolled
at St. Petersburg University where
he studied physics. Popov was a brilliant
student and graduated with honors in
1882, He stayed at the university as a laboratory assistant and doing the equivalent of graduate studies while getting hands
on experience with laboratory equipment
and testing procedures.
In
1883 he left the university for a better
paying and more prestigious position
as an instructor at head of the laboratory at the Russian Navy’s Torpedo School at Kronstadt.
Of
course on Kronstadt Popov was not doing abstract
basic research. He was more engineer than scientist, working on practical problems for the Imperial Navy which was straining to
join other great powers in modernizing their fleet. One of the problems
that he was investigating was the failure
in the electrical wire insulation on steel
ships. He discovered it was
caused by electrical resonance which
in which oscillation in high frequency electrical current seemed
to be somehow communicated over at
least short distances led him to
further research on that topic. That in turn led him to interest in the
mysterious waves discovered by German physicist Heinrich Hertz in 1888.
A
trip in 1893 for the scientific
conferences held in conjunction with the World’s Columbian Exposition in Chicago brought Popov up to speed with the most recent and important discoveries in the fast moving research into Hertzian waves. The next year he read about the
accomplishment of Englishman Oliver
Lodge who at a memorial lecture in
London after Hertz’s demonstrated a device that showed what he considered
the “semi-optical” nature the waves
could cross distances and physically affect
the behavior of target material.
Lodge
constructed a detector called a coherer, a glass tube containing metal filings between two electrodes. When waves emitted from an antenna about 50 feet way were
applied to the electrodes, the coherer became
conductive allowing the current from
a battery to pass through it, with
the impulse being picked up by a mirror galvanometer. After receiving a
signal the realigned metal filings
in the coherer had to be reset by a manually operated vibrator or by the vibrations of a bell placed on the table nearby that rang every time a transmission was received.
Popov
concluded that a similar but improved and more sensitive device could detect lightning, which had been shown to emit Hertzian waves at a considerable distance giving the crews
of steel ships to prepare for approaching
storms.
Because
I am lousy at technical description we’ll let Wikipedia summarize Popov’s
Lightning Detector:
…the coherer was
connected to an antenna, and to a separate circuit with a relay and battery which operated an electric bell. The radio noise generated by a lightning
strike turned on the coherer, the
current from the battery was applied to the relay, closing its contacts, which applied current to the electromagnet of the bell, pulling the arm over to ring the bell.
Popov added an innovative automatic
reset feature of a “self tapping” coherer where the bell arm would spring back and tap the coherer, restoring it to its receptive state.
The two chokes in the coherer’s leads prevented the radio signal across the coherer from short circuiting by passing through the DC circuit. He
connected his receiver to a wire antenna
suspended high in the air and to a ground. The antenna idea may have been
based on a lightning rod and was an
early use of a monopole wire aerial.
Got
that?
Popov
described his devise in the paper On the Relation of Metallic Powders to
Electric Oscillations delivered to the Russian Physical and Chemical Society in St. Petersburg on May 7,
1898 which the Russians, and most of the countries which were in the sphere of influence of the former Soviet Union celebrate as the birth of
radio. But there is scant evidence and considerable
doubt that he actually demonstrated creation when he read his paper that
day. Still his paper attracted considerable
international attention, including reaching the Italian Guglielmo Marconi who was interested in applying Hertzian
wave to wireless telegraphy.
Popov's main rival for the title of Father of Radio--Marconi with his radiotelegraph equipment. |
Popov
evidently did not at first recognize that his lightning detector could also be
a communications devise. It is unclear
if he was aware of the near simultaneous
work being done by Marconi. But we
do know that his earliest confirmed
public demonstration came on March 24, 1896 when he set up a transmitter
and a receiver in buildings on different St. Petersburg campuses and transmitted a Morse
code message that rang the bell on the receiver and was transcribed onto a blackboard.
The message reportedly spelled out “Heinrich Hertz” in the Cyrillic alphabet. Popov was reportedly moved to create an
improved devise and demonstrate it after reading Marconi’s 1896 patent application for a radio telegraph system. He had not taken any patents of his own.
Marconi
had demonstrated his radio telegraph system employing significant differences
and improvements over Lodge and Poplov’s early work by transmitting a message
over half a mile in mid-1895, which
was well documented and bolstered by
the patent application which is why most Western countries credit the Italian as the inventor of practical
radio. Marconi was also relentless in promoting his invention and exploring commercial applications.
Popov’s
system was taken up and improved upon by
French entrepreneur Eugene
Ducretet and began manufacturing equipment
in competition with Marconi’s system in 1898.
A poster for a 1948 Soviet bio-pic about Popov references the dramatic communication with the stranded General-Admiral Apraksin. |
Popov
meanwhile set about making his system useful to his masters in the Czarist Navy. He achieved ship-to-shore communication over a distance of 6 miles in 1898 and
30 miles in 1899. In 1900 he set up a station on Hogland Island in the Gulf
of Finland to relay communications with the battleship General-Admiral
Apraksin which had run aground and
then been iced in. The ship was equipped with one of his
transmitters but was too distant to communicate with the Russian Naval bases on
the mainland. The Hogland station acted
as a relay to shore from where the
signals were forwarded to Naval
Headquarters by land line. In the months before the ship could be
reached and rescued more than 400 messages passed through the station between
ship and shore. The celebrated incident cemented the potential for
radio in nautical safety.
Now
a Russian celebrity, Popov was appointed a professor
of the Electrotechnical Institute
in 1901 and made its Director in 1905. He did not live long to enjoy his new
position. He died of a brain hemorrhage on January 13, 1906 at
the age of just 46. The Institute was
later re-named in his honor, just one of many tributes showered on him by the
Czarist government and its Soviet
successors.
Popov’s
family were Romanoff loyalists who
fled Russia to Manchuria in the dangerous chaos of the Revolution.
Eventually the extended
family made it to the United States where
his relatives and descendants have become distinguished
scientists and academics in their
own right.
Despite
their apostasy, the Soviet
government in its nationalistic mode
promoted Popov as the inventor of radio, along with other Russian inventors who
could lay some claim to key inventions and technological innovations. Some of those claims are ridiculous and flimsy, but
Popov probably merits at least equal billing with Marconi in the West.
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