Signaling by electromagnetic waves. (original) (raw)

US793652A - Signaling by electromagnetic waves. - Google Patents

Signaling by electromagnetic waves. Download PDF

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Publication number

US793652A

US793652A US25412905A US1905254129A US793652A US 793652 A US793652 A US 793652A US 25412905 A US25412905 A US 25412905A US 1905254129 A US1905254129 A US 1905254129A US 793652 A US793652 A US 793652A

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United States

Prior art keywords

condenser

aerial

signaling

electromagnetic waves

charging

Prior art date

1905-04-06

Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)

Expired - Lifetime

Application number

US25412905A

Inventor

Reginald A Fessenden

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Individual

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Individual

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1905-04-06

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1905-04-06

Publication date

1905-07-04

1905-04-06 Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual

1905-04-06 Priority to US25412905A priority Critical patent/US793652A/en

1905-07-04 Application granted granted Critical

1905-07-04 Publication of US793652A publication Critical patent/US793652A/en

1922-07-04 Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical

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Description

No. 793,652. PATENTED JULY 4, 1905.

R. A. FESSENDEN.

No. 793,652. PATENTED JULY 4, 19 05. R. A. FESSENDBN.

SIGNALING BY ELEGTROMA GNETIG WAVES.

APPLICATION FILED APR. 6, 190a.

gyi NIH WIT/VX5553. j/VVE/YTUE.

(1 3mm @W J W 2, w M

. ATTOR/VEK No. 793-u652. PATENTED JULY 41v 1905, R. A. FESSENDEN.

SIGNALING BY ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES.

APPLICATION IILED APR. 6, 1905.

4 sums-sum? a.

V QM -wm PATENTED JULY 4, 1905.

R. A. FESSENDEN.

SIGNALING BY ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES.

APPLICATION FILED APR. 6. 1905.

lINVENTOR Atty llqill IIIIII WITNESSES: l

STATES Patented July 4., 1905.

PATENT OFFICE.

SIGNALING BY ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES.

SPECIFICATION forming part of Letters Patent No. 793,652, dated July 4, 1905.

Application filed April 6. 1905. Serial No. 254,129.

To all whom, it may concern.-

Be it known that I, REGINALD A. FEssEN- DEN, a citizen of the United States, residing at ashington, in the District of Columbia, have invented or discovered certain new and useful Improvements in Signaling by Electromagnetic Waves, of which improvements the following is a specification.

The invention described herein relates to certainiimprovements in signaling by electromagnetic waves,and has for itsobject the provision of means for the controlled production of radiations from the aerial.

It is a further object of the invention to provide for the reception of signals from one station while sending signals to another station.

The invention is hereinafter more fully described and claimed.

In the accompanying drawings, forming a part of this specification, Figure 1 is a diagrammatic view of sending and receiving circuits at a station in connection with a selector.

Fig. 2 is a similar view illustrating a modification. Fig. 3 is adiagrammatic view illustrating the manner of simultaneously receiving and sending signals. Fig. 4 is a side elevation of a desirable form of selector and commutator. Fig. 5 is an end elevation of the selector. Fig. 6 is an end elevation of the com-.

mutator, and Fig. 7 is a view illustrating the operation of the commutator.

In the practice of my invention as illustrated in Figs. 1 and 2 the aerial, which is preferably of the construction shown and described in application for Letters Patent, Serial No. 252,942, filed March 30, 1905, is connccted by a

switch

2 with either the receiving mechanism (indicated at 3) or with the sending mechanism. For sending the primary of the

transformer

4 is connected to a suitable source of alternating currents, such as the

dynamo

5, which, with its

exciter

6, is driven by a

suitable motor

7. A transformer of high voltage, preferably from fifty thousand to one hundred thousand volts, is employed unless the method described in Letters Patent No. 706,737 is used, when a lower voltage may be used. As shown, the current through the primary of the

transformer

4 is regulated by a suitable means, as a relay, (indicated at 8,) and controlled by the

key

9 or other suitable means. The current through the primary of the transformer is adjusted by suitable means, (indicated at 10.) One of the terminals of the secondary of the transformer is connected, through the adjustable inductance or

autotransformer

11 and

condenser

12, to a

contact

13 and the other terminal of thesecondary to a contact-

plate

14 through an

adjustable resistance

15, whereby the amount of surging or oscillating may be regulated while the

condenser

12 is being changed. Contact-

plates

16 and 17 are arranged intermediate of the

contacts

13 and 14 and when electrically connected, as hereinafter described, form portions of a closed circuit including the

condenser

12 and

inductance

11 in operative relation to the aerial 1. One or more pairs of

arms

18, 19, 20, and 21 are so arranged that when rotated they will contact with or be brought into operative relation to the pairs of

plates

13, 14, 16, and 17. The arms of each pair and the plates of each pair are so arranged relatively to each other that when one arm, as 18, is in contact with one plate, as 13, the

other arm

19 of the pair will be in contact with

plate

14 and when the

arm

18 moves to the

plate

16 the

arm

19 will be in contact with

plate

17 The arms should be so rotated that the charging and discharging of the condenser will occur at a time of maximum potential of the alternating current and by the employment of a sulficient number of arms may occur at every period of maximum potential.

It is preferred, however, that this charging and discharging should occur at every fourth period of maximum potential, so that if the dynamo is a sixty-cycle machine the charging and discharging will occur thirty times a second. While the arms may be driven in any suitable manner, it is preferred that they should be rotated by the shaft 'of the

generator

5.

A convenient construction of selector is shown in Figs. 4 and 5, where the

contactplates

13, 14, 16, and 17 are formed by pins adjustably mounted on

arms

22 and 23,loosely mounted on the

shaft

24,connected to the shaft of the

generator

5. The pins are mounted in blocks of insulating material secured to the

arms

22 and 23, which can be adjusted as regards their angular separation by any suitable meanssuch, for example, as that shown. The

arms

18, 19, 20, and 21 are formed by radial pins secured in a

disk

25, mounted in the

shaft

24. ,Diametrically opposite pins are electrically connected, butinsulated from adjacent pins, as shown.

In the construction shown in Fig. 1 the movable members of the selector are brought into operative relation to the other members at regularly-recurrent intervals, and the radiation from the aerial is dependent upon the flow of current through the

transformer

4, such flow being regulated by the

key

9. In other words, the charging of the condenser is regulated, and its discharge follows at regular intervals thereafter. In lieu of regulating the charging of the condenser its charging may be continuous at regular intervals and its discharge regulated by a key, as shown in Fig. 2. As shown therein, provision is made for so shifting one contact-plate, as 17, in the discharging-circuit that although the

arms

18, 19, 20, and 21 rotate continuously and the condenser is connected at regular recurrent intervals to the source of alternating current the discharge is controlled by the operator. This control can be conveniently had by the employment of magnetic means for shifting the

plate

17. In the construction shown the

plate

17 is secured to the core of the solenoid 26,the coil thereof being in a circuit controlled by the

key

9. When this method is employed for multiplex sending, a number of movable contact-plates, each operated by its own key, are employed. It will be observed that when employing the selector for sending there will be certain short intervals between the charging and discharging of the condenser. By the employment of suitable means these intervals may be utilized for receiving.

In Fig. 3 a system for simultaneous sending and receiving is diagrammatically shown. The circuit containing the

inductance

27 and

condenser

28 is tuned, by preference, to the sending -conductor. When using a transformer, as indicated at 29, to charge the condenser, it is preferably adjusted to have a secondary voltage of twenty-five thousand volts. When desired, an

adjustable resistance

30 may be employed for dampening unnecessary oscillations.

As described in connection with the apparatus shown in Figs. 1 and 2, a selector consisting of stationary and movable members is employed, whereby the

condenser

28 is alter natel y placed in charging relation to the

transformer

29 and in discharging relation to the sending-conductor. This selector is indicated in Fig. 3 by a

movable conductor

31 and contact-

plates

32, 33, 34, and 35; but it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the construction of selector shown in Figs. 1, 4,

and 5 may be employed and that radiation from the sending conductor may be controlled, as shown in Fig. 1, by controlling the flow of current in the transformer, or by controlling the discharge of the condenser, as

shown in Fig. 2. The aerial 1 is connected to The aerial is connected to a

brush

36, while the

brush

37 is connected to ground. The

brushes

38, 39, and 40 are connected to portions of the receiving apparatus. The

primaries

44 and 45 of an interference-preventer, as described in application, Serial No. 240,269, filed January 9, 1905, and

variable condensers

46 and 47 are connected in parallel to

brushes

38 and 40. The

variable condensers

46 and 47 are adjusted to have equal capacity, so that when the

variable condenser

48 is not in circuit the

circuits

44 46 and 45 47 will respond equally well to any frequency, but when

condenser

48 is in circuit one of the circuits, as 44 46, will respond to a different frequency from that to which the circuit 45 47 will respond. The

secondaries

49 50 are connected in series to a

suitable receiver

51. The rotation of the commutator-spool should bear a constant relation to that of the movable portion of the selector, and as the movement of the movable portion of the selector should have a-constant relation to the rotation of the movable element of the generator the commutator-spool and the movable element of the selector are operated by the shaft of the generator.

The

brushes

36, 37, 38, 39, and 40 and the commutator-segments are so fixed relatively to the angular position of the

movable conductor

31 that when the conductor is in the position shown in full lines, at which time the

condenser

28 will be discharged, the aerial will be connected to ground. While the movable conductor is moving from charging to discharging position and. from the latter to charging position the brushes and segments of the commutator have the relative positions indicated by dotted lines in Fig. 7, so that aerial is connected through the

condenser

28 to brush 36, thence through segment 52 to brush 38, thence through the receiver-circuit containing the interference preventer to

brushes

39 40, and thence through commutatorsegment 53 and

brush

37 to ground. While these connections are established the receiving-circuits and mechanism are in operative relation to the aerial and messages can be received.

By the continued movement of the

conductor

31 and the commutator the former will be.

brought to condenser charging or discharging position and the segments and brushes of the commutator to positions indicated in full lines in Fig. 7. In this position the aerial is connected to ground through

brushes

36 and 37 and segment 54:. At the same time the recei vercircuit is short-circuited by the connection of the

brushes

38 and 39 by the segment 55, and the

condenser

48 is insulated, as the

brushes

40 Will rest on an insulated portion of the commutator and the circuits 4:4: 456 and 47 are balanced, and no eifect is produced on the receiver.

It Will be understood that in connection with the system shown in Fig. 3 suitable means, such as shown in Figs. 1 and 2, are employed for controlling the charging or discharging of the condenser, and thereby the radiations from the aerial.

I claim herein as my invention- 1. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic Waves the combination of an aerial, a charging-circuit,"a discharging-circuit and means for connecting the aerial alternately to the charging and discharging circuits.

2. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, a source of alternating current and means for connecting the condenser to the aerial and the source of alternating current at periods of maximum potential.

3. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, a source of alternating current and means for connecting the condenser alternately to the aerial and the source of alternating current at periods of maximum potential.

4. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, a source of alternating current, means for alternately placing the condenser in operative relation to the aerial and the source of current and means for varying the potential in the condenser (i. a. charging or discharging the condenser).

5. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a

condenser, a source of alternating current and a rotary conductor for placing the condenser in operative relation alternately to the aerial and the source of current.

6. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, a sourceof alternating current and a movable conductor for alternately placing the condenser in operative relation to the aerial and the source of current at periods of maximum potential.

7. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, an alternating-current generator, and a movable conductor operated by the generator for alternately placing the condenser in operative relation to the aerial and the generator.

8. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic Waves the combination of an aerial, receiving mechanism, means for the continuous generation of electromagnetic Waves, continuously-operating means for placing the aerial in operative relation alternately to the receiving mechanism and the generating means.

9. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, a source of alternating current, means for alternately placing the condenser in operative relation to theaerial and the current source, a receiving-circuit and means for connecting the aerial to the receiving-circuit at times intermediate of'the connection of the condenser With the aerial.

10. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic Waves the combination of an aerial, a condenser, means for alternately charging the condenser and discharging it through the aerial, a receiving-circuit and means for connecting the receiving-circuit to the condenser, intermediate of the charging and discharging periods.

11. In a system of signaling by electromagnetic waves the combination of an aerial, a sending-circuit, a receiving-circuit and continuously-operating means for placing said circuits alternately in operative relation to the aerial.

12. In a system of signaling by electromagator for placing the condenser in operative relation alternately With the aerial and the IIO generator, a receiving-circuit and a commutator operative by the generator for connect ing the receiving-circuit to the condenser 1ntermediate of the charging and discharging operating commutator for connecting the aerial alternately to the receiving and sending circuits.

In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand.

REGINALD A. FESSENDENF Witnesses:

THOMAS

1. BROWN, LEONA FEATHERS.

US25412905A 1905-04-06 1905-04-06 Signaling by electromagnetic waves. Expired - Lifetime US793652A (en)

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