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Radio

The article below is about radio, a medium of communication.

Other uses include:


Radio is a technology that allows for the transmission of sound or other signals by modulation of electromagnetic waves. A radio wave is created whenever a charged object accelerates. When a radio wave passes a wire, it induces a moving electric charge that can be detected. Since radio seems to act at a distance, it provides many nearly magical modern techniques.

Discovery

The theoretical basis of the propagation of electro-magnetic waves was first described by James Clerk Maxwell in his paper to the Royal Society A dynamical theory of the electromagnetic field, which followed his work between 1861 and 1865.

It was Heinrich Rudolf Hertz who, between 1886 and 1888 first validated Maxwell's theory through experiment, demonstrating that radio radiation had all the properties of waves, and discovering that the electromagnetic equations could be reformulated into a partial differential equation called the wave equation.

On Christmas Eve, 1906, using his heterodyne principle, Reginald Fessenden transmitted the first radio broadcast in history from Brant Rock Station, Massachusetts[?]. Ships at sea heard a broadcast that included Fessenden playing the song O Holy Night on the violin and reading a passage from the Bible. The World's first regular wireless broadcasts for entertainment commenced in 1922 from the Marconi Research Centre at Writtle[?] near Chelmsford, England, which was also the location of the World's first "wireless" factory.

Invention

The identity of the original inventor of radio, at the time called wireless telegraphy, is contentious.

Guglielmo Marconi was awarded what is sometimes recognised as the World's first patent for Radio with British Patent 12039, Improvements in transmitting electrical impulses and signals and in apparatus there-for.

In the USA, some key developments in Radio's early history were created and patented in 1897 by Nikola Tesla. However the US Patent Office reversed it's decision in 1904, awarding Guglielmo Marconi a patent for the invention of Radio, possibly influenced by Marconi's financial backers in the States, who included Thomas Edison and Andrew Carnegie. In 1909 Marconi, with Karl Ferdinand Braun were also awarded the Nobel Prize in Physics for "contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy".

However, Tesla's patent (number 645576) was reinstated in 1943 by the US Supreme Court, shortly after his death. This decision was apparently made for financal reasons, to allow the US Government to avoid having to the pay damages that were being claimed by the Marconi Company for use of it's patents during World War I.

Claims have also been made that Nathan Stubblefield[?], invented radio before either Tesla or Marconi, however his device seems to have worked by induction transmission rather than radio transmission.

Marconi opened the World's first "wireless" factory in Hall Street, Chelmsford, England in 1898, employing around 50 people.

Uses of Radio

Many of its early uses were naval, for sending morse code messages between ships and land. Today, radio takes many forms, including wireless networks, mobile communications[?] of all types, as well as radio broadcasting. Read more about radio's History.

Before the advent of television, commercial radio broadcasts included not only news and music, but dramas, comedies, variety shows, and many other forms of entertainment. Radio was unique among dramatic presentation that it used only sound. For more, see radio programming.

There are a number of uses of radio:

See also: Radio propagation and ionosphere, Radio programming, old-time radio, international broadcasting

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump