Marconi's_Coherer_Receiver_at_Oxford_Museum_History_of_Science.jpg
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Summary
Description Marconi's Coherer Receiver at Oxford Museum History of Science.jpg |
English:
A pioneering radio receiver using a
coherer
, a tube of metal filings, as a detector constructed by Italian radio inventor Guglielmo Marconi in 1896, on display in the Oxford Museum of the History of Science, UK. The coherer is the glass tube on the right. When it detected a radio signal it rang a bell. This receiver was used in a landmark 1896 demonstration of radio communication at Toynbee hall that made Marconi a celebrity. The transmitter that was used with it
(metal balls)
is seen on the left.
Caption on card: " Coherer receiver by Guglielmo Marconi, 1896: Marconi used this device for a famous public demonstration of wireless in London's Toynbee Hall in 1896. At a public lecture by William Preece, chief engineer of the General Post Office, whenever Preece switched a transmitter and created an electric spark, a bell rang in a box Marconi took to any part of the lecture room. There was no visible connection between the two. The demonstration caused a sensation and made Marconi a celebrity. " |
Date | |
Source | Own work |
Author | Ozeye |
Other versions | Marconi's Coherer Receiver at Oxford Museum History of Science (cropped).jpg version only showing the receiver, with the part of the transmitter visible on the left cropped out |
Camera location | 51° 45′ 15″ N, 1° 15′ 19″ W | View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMap | 51.754167; -1.255278 |
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