| Marconi, Guglielmo (1874-1937) |
|
In 1900 he took out
his famous patent No. 7777 for "tuned or syntonic telegraphy" and, on
an historic day in December 1901, determined to prove that wireless waves
were not affected by the curvature of the Earth, he used his system for
transmitting the first wireless signals across the Atlantic between Poldhu,
Cornwall, and St. John's, Newfoundland, a distance of 2100 miles. During his war service
in Italy he returned to his investigation of short waves, which he had
used in his first experiments. After further tests by his collaborators
in England, an intensive series of trials was conducted in 1923 between
experimental installations at the Poldhu Station and in Marconi's yacht
"Elettra" cruising in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, and this led to
the establishment of the beam system for long distance communication.
Proposals to use this system as a means of Imperial communications were
accepted by the British Government and the first beam station, linking
England and Canada, was opened in 1926, other stations being added the
following year. In 1931 Marconi began research into the propagation characteristics of still shorter waves, resulting in the opening in 1932 of the world's first microwave radiotelephone link between the Vatican City and the Pope's summer residence at Castel Gandolfo. Two years later at Sestri Levante he demonstrated his microwave radio beacon for ship navigation and in 1935, again in Italy, gave a practical demonstration of the principles of radar, the coming of which he had first foretold in a lecture to the American Institute of Radio Engineers in New York in 1922. He has been the recipient
of honorary doctorates of several universities and many other international
honours and awards, among them the Nobel Prize for Physics, which in 1909
he shared with Professor Karl Braun, the Albert Medal of the Royal Society
of Arts, the John Fritz Medal and the Kelvin Medal. He was decorated by
the Tsar of Russia with the Order of St. Anne, the King of Italy created
him Commander of the Order of St. Maurice and St. Lazarus, and awarded
him the Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown of Italy in 1902. Marconi
also received the freedom of the City of Rome (1903), and was created
Chevalier of the Civil Order of Savoy in 1905. Many other distinctions
of this kind followed. In 1914 he was both created a Senatore in the Italian
Senate and app ointed Honorary Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian
Order in England. He received the hereditary title of Marchese in 1929. Marconi died in Rome on July 20, 1937. From Nobel Lectures, Physics 1901-1921. |