THE ONWARD MOVEMENT OF MAN--THE ENERGY OF THE MOVEMENT--THE THREE WAYS
OF INCREASING HUMAN ENERGY.
Of all the endless variety of phenomena
which nature presents to our
senses, there is none that fills our minds with greater
wonder than that inconceivably complex movement
which, in its entirety, we designate as human
life; Its mysterious origin is veiled in the forever
impenetrable mist of the past, its character is rendered
incomprehensible by its infinite intricacy, and its
destination is hidden in the unfathomable depths of the
future. Whence does it come? What is it? Whither does
it tend? are the great questions which the sages of all
times have endeavored to answer.
Modern science says: The sun is the past, the earth
is the present, the moon is the future. From an
incandescent mass we have originated, and into a frozen
mass we shall turn. Merciless is the law of nature, and
rapidly and irresistibly we are drawn to our doom. Lord
Kelvin, in his profound meditations, allows us only a
short span of life, something like six million years,
after which time the suns bright light will have ceased
to shine, and its life giving heat will have ebbed away,
and our own earth will be a lump of ice, hurrying on
through the eternal night. But do not let us despair.
There will still be left upon it a glimmering spark of
life, and there will be a chance to kindle a new fire on
some distant star. This wonderful possibility seems,
indeed, to exist, judging from Professor Dewar's
beautiful experiments with liquid air, which show that
germs of organic life are not destroyed by cold, no
matter how intense; consequently they may be transmitted
through the interstellar space. Meanwhile the cheering
lights of science and art, ever increasing in intensity,
illuminate our path, and marvels they disclose, and the
enjoyments they offer, make us measurably forgetful of
the gloomy future.
Though we may never be able to comprehend human
life, we know certainly that it is a movement, of
whatever nature it be. The existence of movement
unavoidably implies a body which is being moved and a
force which is moving it. Hence, wherever there is life,
there is a mass moved by a force. All mass possesses
inertia, all force tends to persist. Owing to this
universal property and condition, a body, be it at rest
or in motion, tends to remain in the same state, and a
force, manifesting itself anywhere and through whatever
cause, produces an equivalent opposing force, and as an
absolute necessity of this it follows that every movement
in nature must be rhythmical. Long ago this simple truth
was clearly pointed out by Herbert Spencer, who arrived
at it through a somewhat different process of reasoning.
It is borne out in everything we perceive--in the
movement of a planet, in the surging and ebbing of the
tide, in the reverberations of the air, the swinging of
a pendulum, the oscillations of an electric current, and
in the infinitely varied phenomena of organic life. Does
not the whole of human life attest to it? Birth, growth,
old age, and death of an individual, family, race, or
nation, what is it all but a rhythm? All life-manifestation,
then, even in its most intricate form, as
exemplified in man, however involved and inscrutable, is
only a movement, to which the same general laws of
movement which govern throughout the physical universe
must be applicable.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 334,
Photograph X.]
FIG. 1. BURNING THE NITROGEN OF THE ATMOSPHERE.
Note to Fig. 1.--This result is produced by the discharge
of an electrical oscillator giving twelve million volts.
The electrical pressure, alternating one hundred thousand
times per second, excites the normally inert nitrogen,
causing it to combine with the oxygen. The flame-like
discharge shown in the photograph measures sixty-five
feet across.
When we speak of man, we have a conception of
humanity as a whole, and before applying scientific
methods to, the investigation of his movement we must
accept this as a physical fact. But can anyone doubt
to-day that all the millions of individuals and all the
innumerable types and characters constitute an entity, a
unit? Though free to think and act, we are held
together, like the stars in the firmament, with ties
inseparable. These ties cannot be seen, but we can feel
them. I cut myself in the finger, and it pains me: this
finger is part of my. I see a friend hurt, and it hurts
me, too: my friend and I are one. And now I see stricken
down an enemy, a lump of matter which, of all the lumps
of matter in the universe, I care least for, and it still
grieves me. Does this not prove that each of us is only
part of a whole?
For ages this idea has been proclaimed in the
consummately wise teachings of religion, probably not
alone as a means of insuring peace and harmony among men,
but as a deeply founded truth. The Buddhist expresses it
in one way, the Christian in another, but both say the
same: We are all one. Metaphysical proofs are, however,
not the only ones which we are able to bring forth in
support of this idea. Science, too, recognizes this
connectedness of separate individuals, though not quite
in the same sense as it admits that the suns, planets,
and moons of a constellation are one body, and there can
be no doubt that it will be experimentally confirmed in
times to come, when our means and methods for
investigating psychical and other states and phenomena
shall have been brought to great perfection. Still more:
this one human being lives on and on. The individual is
ephemeral, races and nations come and pass away, but man
remains. Therein lies the profound difference between
the individual and the whole. Therein, too, is to be
found the partial explanation of many of those marvelous
phenomena of heredity which are the result of countless
centuries of feeble but persistent influence.
Conceive, then, man as a mass urged on by a force.
Though this movement is not of a translatory character,
implying change of place, yet the general laws of
mechanical movement are applicable to it, and the energy
associated with this mass can be measured, in accordance
with well-known principles, by half the product of the
mass with the square of a certain velocity. So, for
instance, a cannon-ball which is at rest possesses a
certain amount of energy in the form of heat, which we
measure in a similar way. We imagine the ball to consist
of innumerable minute particles, called atoms or
molecules, which vibrate or whirl around one another. We
determine their masses and velocities, and from them the
energy of each of these minute systems, and adding them
all together, we get an idea of the total heat-energy
contained in the ball, which is only seemingly at rest.
In this purely theoretical estimate this energy may then
be calculated by multiplying half of the total mass--that
is half of the sum of all the small masses--with the
square of a velocity which is determined from the
velocities of the separate particles. In like manner we
may conceive of human energy being measured by half the
human mass multiplied with the square of the velocity
which we are not yet able to compute. But our deficiency
in this knowledge will not vitiate the truth of the
deductions I shall draw, which rest on the firm basis
that the same laws of mass and force govern throughout
nature.
Man, however, is not an ordinary mass, consisting of
spinning atoms and molecules, and containing merely heat-energy.
He is a mass possessed of certain higher
qualities by reason of the creative principle of life
with which he is endowed. His mass, as the water in an
ocean wave, is being continuously exchanged, new taking
the place of the old. Not only this, but he grows
propagates, and dies, thus altering his mass
independently, both in bulk and density. What is most
wonderful of all, he is capable of increasing or
diminishing his velocity of movement by the mysterious
power he possesses by appropriating more or less energy
from other substance, and turning it into motive energy.
But in any given moment we may ignore these slow changes
and assume that human energy is measured by half the
product of man's mass with the square of a certain
hypothetical velocity. However we may compute this
velocity, and whatever we may take as the standard of its
measure, we must, in harmony with this conception, come
to the conclusion that the great problem of science is,
and always will be, to increase the energy thus defined.
Many years ago, stimulated by the perusal of that deeply
interesting work, Draper's "History of the Intellectual
Development of Europe," depicting so vividly human
movement, I recognized that to solve this eternal problem
must ever be the chief task of the man of science. Some
results of my own efforts to this end I shall endeavor
briefly to describe here.

DIAGRAM a. THE THREE WAYS OF INCREASING HUMAN ENERGY.
Let, then, in diagram a, M represent the mass of
man. This mass is impelled in one direction by a force
f, which is resisted by another partly frictional and
partly negative force R, acting in a direction exactly
opposite, and retarding the movement of the mass. Such
an antagonistic force is present in every movement and
must be taken into consideration. The difference between
these two forces is the effective force which imparts a
velocity V to the mass M in the direction of the arrow on
the line representing the force f. In accordance with
the preceding, the human energy will then be given by the
product ½ MV2 = ½ MV x V,
in which M is the total mass of
man in the ordinary interpretation of the term "mass,"
and V is a certain hypothetical velocity, which, in the
present state of science, we are unable exactly to define
and determine. To increase the human energy is,
therefore, equivalent to increasing this product, and
there are, as will readily be seen, only three ways
possible to attain this result, which are illustrated in
the above diagram. The first way shown in the top
figure, is to increase the mass (as indicated by the
dotted circle), leaving the two opposing forces the same.
The second way is to reduce the retarding force R to a
smaller value r, leaving the mass and the impelling force
the same, as diagrammatically shown in the middle figure.
The third way, which is illustrated in the last figure,
is to increase the impelling force f to a higher value F,
while the mass and the retarding force R remain
unaltered. Evidently fixed limits exist as regards
increase of mass and reduction of retarding force, but
the impelling force can be increased indefinitely. Each
of these three possible solutions presents a different
aspect of the main problem of increasing human energy,
which is thus divided into three distinct problems, to be
successively considered.
THE FIRST PROBLEM: HOW TO INCREASE THE HUMAN MASS--THE
BURNING OF ATMOSPHERIC NITROGEN.
Viewed generally, there are obviously two ways of
increasing the mass of mankind: first, by aiding and
maintaining those forces and conditions which tend to
increase it; and, second, by opposing and reducing those
which tend to diminish it. The mass will be increased by
careful attention to health, by substantial food, by
moderation, by regularity of habits, by promotion of
marriage, by conscientious attention to children, and,
generally stated, by the observance of all the many
precepts and laws of religion and hygiene. But in adding
new mass to the old, three cases again present
themselves. Either the mass added is of the same
velocity as the old, or it is of a smaller or of a higher
velocity. To gain an idea of the relative importance of
these cases, imagine a train composed of, say, one
hundred locomotives running on a track, and suppose that,
to increase the energy of the moving mass, four more
locomotives are added to the train. If these four move
at the same velocity at which the train is going, the
total energy will be increased four per cent.; if they
are moving at only one half of that velocity, the
increase will amount to only one per cent.; if they are
moving at twice that velocity, the increase of energy
will be sixteen per cent. This simple illustration shows
that it is of greatest importance to add mass of a higher
velocity. Stated more to the point, if, for example, the
children be of the same degree of enlightenment as the
parents,--that is, mass of the "same velocity,"--the
energy will simply increase proportionately to the number
added. If they are less intelligent or advanced, or mass
of "smaller velocity," there will be a very slight gain
in the energy; but if they are further advanced, or mass
of "higher velocity," then the new generation will add
very considerably to the sum total of human energy. any
addition of mass of "smaller velocity," beyond that
indispensable amount required by the law expressed in the
proverb, "Mens sana in corpore sano," should be
strenuously opposed. For instance, the mere development
of muscle, as aimed at in some of our colleges, I
consider equivalent to adding mass of "smaller velocity,"
and I would not commend it, although my views were
different when I was a student myself. Moderate
exercise, insuring the right balance between mind and
body, and the highest efficiency of performance, is, of
course, a prime requirement. The above example shows
that the most important result to be attained is the
education, or the increase of the "velocity," of the mass
newly added.
Conversely, it scarcely need be stated that
everything that is against the teachings of religion and
the laws of hygiene is tending to decrease the mass.
Whisky, wine, tea coffee, tobacco, and other such
stimulants are responsible for the shortening of the
lives of many, and ought to be used with moderation. But
I do not think that rigorous measures of suppression of
habits followed through many generations are commendable.
It is wiser to preach moderation than abstinence. We
have become accustomed to these stimulants, and if such
reforms are to be effected, they must be slow and
gradual. Those who are devoting their energies to such
ends could make themselves far more useful by turning
their efforts in other directions, as, for instance,
toward providing pure water.
For every person who perishes from the effects of a
stimulant, at least a thousand die from the consequences
of drinking impure water. This precious fluid, which
daily infuses new life into us, is likewise the chief
vehicle through which disease and death enter our bodies.
The germs of destruction it conveys are enemies all the
more terrible as they perform their fatal work
unperceived. They seal our doom while we live and enjoy.
The majority of people are so ignorant or careless in
drinking water, and the consequences of this are so
disastrous, that a philanthropist can scarcely use his
efforts better than by endeavoring to enlighten those who
are thus injuring themselves. By systematic purification
and sterilization of the drinkingwater the human mass
would be very considerably increased. It should be made
a rigid rule--which might be enforced by law--to boil or
to sterilize otherwise the drinking water in every
household and public place. The mere filtering does not
afford sufficient security against infection. All ice
for internal uses should be artificially prepared from
water thoroughly sterilized. The importance of
eliminating germs of disease from the city water is
generally recognized, but little is being done to improve
the existing conditions, as no satisfactory method of
sterilizing great quantities of water has yet been
brought forward. By improved electrical appliances we
are now enabled to produce ozone cheaply and in large
amounts, and this ideal disinfectant seems to offer a
happy solution of the important question.
Gambling, business rush, and excitement,
particularly on the exchanges, are causes of much mass
reduction, all the more so because the individuals
concerned represent units of higher value. Incapacity of
observing the first symptoms of an illness, and careless
neglect of the same, are important factors of mortality.
In noting carefully every new sign of approaching danger,
and making conscientiously every possible effort to avert
it, we are not only following wise laws of hygiene in the
interest of our well-being and the success of our labors,
but we are also complying with a higher moral duty.
Everyone should consider his body as a priceless gift
from one whom he loves above all, as a marvelous work of
art, of undescribable beauty and mastery beyond human
conception, and so delicate and frail that a word, a
breath, a look, nay, a thought, may injure it.
Uncleanliness, which breeds disease and death, is not
only a self destructive but highly immoral habit. In
keeping our bodies free from infection, healthful, and
pure, we are expressing our reverence for the high
principle with which they are endowed. He who follows
the precepts of hygiene in this spirit is proving
himself, so far, truly religious. Laxity of morals is a
terrible evil, which poisons both mind and body, and
which is responsible for a great reduction of the human
mass in some countries. Many of the present customs and
tendencies are productive of similar hurtful results.
For example, the society life, modern education and
pursuits of women, tending to draw them away from their
household duties and make men out of them, must needs
detract from the elevating ideal they represent, diminish
the artistic creative power, and cause sterility and a
general weakening of the race. A thousand other evils
might be mentioned, but all put together, in their
bearing upon the problem under discussion, they could not
equal a single one, the want of food, brought on by
poverty, destitution, and famine. Millions of
individuals die yearly for want of food, thus keeping
down the mass. Even in our enlightened communities, and
not withstanding the many charitable efforts, this is
still, in all probability, the chief evil. I do not mean
here absolute want of food, but want of healthful
nutriment.
How to provide good and plentiful food is,
therefore, a most important question of the day. On the
general principles the raising of cattle as a means of
providing food is objectionable, because, in the sense
interpreted above, it must undoubtedly tend to the
addition of mass of a "smaller velocity." It is
certainly preferable to raise vegetables, and I think,
therefore, that vegetarianism is a commendable departure
from the established barbarious habit. That we can
subsist on plant food and perform our work even to
advantage is not a theory, but a well-demonstrated fact.
Many races living almost exclusively on vegetables are of
superior physique and strength. There is no doubt that
some plant food, such as oatmeal, is more economical than
meat, and superior to it in regard to both mechanical and
mental performance. Such food, moreover, taxes our
digestive organs decidedly less, and, in making us more
contented and sociable, produces an amount of good
difficult to estimate. In view of these facts every
effort should be made to stop the wanton and cruel
slaughter of animals, which must be destructive to our
morals. To free ourselves from animal instincts and
appetites, which keep us down, we should begin at the
very root from which we spring: we should effect a
radical reform in the character of the food.
There seems to be no philosophical necessity for
food. We can conceive of organized beings living without
nourishment, and deriving all the energy they need for
the performance of their lifefunctions from the ambient
medium. In a crystal we have the clear evidence of the
existence of a formative life-principle, and though we
cannot understand the life of a crystal, it is none the
less a living being. There may be, besides crystals,
other such individualized, material systems of beings,
perhaps of gaseous constitution, or composed of substance
still more tenuous. In view of this possibility,--nay,
probability, we cannot apodictically deny the existence
of organized beings on a planet merely because the
conditions on the same are unsuitable for the existence
of life as we conceive it. We cannot even, with positive
assurance, assert that some of them might not be present
here, in this our world, in the very midst of us, for
their constitution and life-manifestation may be such
that we are unable to perceive them.
The production of artificial food as a means for
causing an increase of the human mass naturally suggests
itself, but a direct attempt of this kind to provide
nourishment does not appear to me rational, at least not
for the present. Whether we could thrive on such food is
very doubtful. We are the result of ages of continuous
adaptation, and we cannot radically change without
unforeseen and, in all probability, disastrous
consequences. So uncertain an experiment should not be
tried. By far the best way, it seems to me, to meet the
ravages of the evil, would be to find ways of increasing
the productivity of the soil. With this object the
preservation of forests is of an importance which cannot
be overestimated, and in this connection, also, the
utilization of water-power for purposes of electrical
transmission, dispensing in many ways with the necessity
of burning wood, and tending thereby to forest
preservation, is to be strongly advocated. But there are
limits in the improvement to be effected in this and
similar ways.
To increase materially the productivity of the soil,
it must be more effectively fertilized by artificial
means. The question of food-production resolves itself,
then, into the question how best to fertilize the soil.
What it is that made the soil is still a mystery. To
explain its origin is probably equivalent to explaining
the origin of life itself. The rocks, disintegrated by
moisture and heat and wind and weather, were in
themselves not capable of maintaining life. Some
unexplained condition arose, and some new principle came
into effect, and the first layer capable of sustaining
low organisms, like mosses was formed. These, by their
life and death, added more of the lifesustaining quality
to the soil, and higher organisms could then subsist, and
so on and on, until at last highly developed plant and
animal life could flourish. But though the theories are,
even now, not in agreement as to how fertilization is
effected, it is a fact, only too well ascertained, that
the soil cannot indefinitely sustain life, and some way
must be found to supply it with the substances which have
been abstracted from it by the plants. The chief and
most valuable among these substances are compounds of
nitrogen, and the cheap production of these is,
therefore, the key for the solution of the all-important
food problem. Our atmosphere contains an inexhaustible
amount of nitrogen, and could we but oxidize it and
produce these compounds, an incalculable benefit for
mankind would follow.
Long ago this idea took a powerful hold on the
imagination of scientific men, but an efficient means for
accomplishing this result could not be devised. The
problem was rendered extremely difficult by the
extraordinary inertness of the nitrogen, which refuses to
combine even with oxygen. But here electricity comes to
our aid: the dormant affinities of the element are
awakened by an electric current of the proper quality.
As a lump of coal which has been in contact with oxygen
for centuries without burning will combine with it when
once ignited, so nitrogen, excited by electricity, will
burn. I did not succeed, however, in producing
electrical discharges exciting very effectively the
atmospheric nitrogen until a comparatively recent date,
although I showed, in May, 1891, in a scientific lecture,
a novel form of discharge or electrical flame named "St.
Elmo's hotfire," which, besides being capable of
generating ozone in abundance, also possessed, as I
pointed out on that occasion, distinctly the quality of
exciting chemical affinities. This discharge or flame
was then only three or four inches long, its chemical
action was likewise very feeble, and consequently the
process of oxidation of nitrogen was wasteful. How to
intensify this action was the question. Evidently
electric currents of a peculiar kind had to be produced
in order to render the process of nitrogen combustion
more efficient.
The first advance was made in ascertaining that the
chemical activity of the discharge was very considerably
increased by using currents of extremely high frequency
or rate of vibration. This was an important improvement,
but practical considerations soon set a definite limit to
the progress in this direction. Next, the effects of the
electrical pressure of the current impulses, of their
wave-form and other characteristic features, were
investigated. Then the influence of the atmospheric
pressure and temperature and of the presence of water and
other bodies was studied, and thus the best conditions
for causing the most intense chemical action of the
discharge and securing the highest efficiency of the
process were gradually ascertained. Naturally, the
improvements were not quick in coming; still, little by
little, I advanced. The flame grew larger and larger,
and its oxidizing action grew more intense. From an
insignificant brush-discharge a few inches long it
developed into a marvelous electrical phenomenon, a
roaring blaze, devouring the nitrogen of the atmosphere
and measuring sixty or seventy feet across. Thus slowly,
almost imperceptibly, possibility became accomplishment.
All is not yet done, by any means, but to what a degree
my efforts have been rewarded an idea may be gained from
an inspection of Fig. 1 (p. 176), which, with its title,
is self explanatory. The flame-like discharge visible is
produced by the intanse electrical oscillations which
pass through the coil shown, and violently agitate the
electrified molecules of the air. By this means a strong
affinity is created between the two normally indifferent
constituents of the atmosphere, and they combine readily,
even if no further provision is made for intensifying the
chemical action of the discharge. In the manufacture of
nitrogen compounds by this method, of course, every
possible means bearing upon the intensity of this action
and the efficiency of the process will be taken advantage
of, and, besides, special arrangements will be provided
for the fixation of the compounds formed, as they are
generally unstable, the nitrogen becoming again inert
after a little lapse of time. Steam is a simple and
effective means for fixing permanently the compounds.
The result illustrated makes it practicable to oxidize
the atmospheric nitrogen in unlimited quantities, merely
by the use of cheap mechanical power and simple
electrical apparatus. In this manner many compounds of
nitrogen may be manufactured all over the world, at a
small cost, and in any desired amount, and by means of
these compounds the soil can be fertilized and its
productiveness indefinitely increased. An abundance of
cheap and healthful food, not artificial, but such as we
are accustomed to, may thus be obtained. This new and
inexhaustible source of food-supply will be of
incalculable benefit to mankind, for it will enormously
contribute to the increase of the human mass, and thus
add immensely to human energy. Soon, I hope, the world
will see the beginning of an industry which, in time to
come, will, I believe, be in importance next to that if
iron.
THE SECOND PROBLEM: HOW TO REDUCE THE FORCE RETARDING THE
HUMAN MASS--THE ART OF TELAUTOMATICS.
As before stated, the force which retards the onward
movement of man is partly frictional and partly negative.
To illustrate this distinction I may name, for example,
ignorance, stupidity, and imbecility as some of the
purely frictional forces, or resistances devoid of any
directive tendency. On the other hand, visionariness,
insanity, self-destructive tendency, religious
fanaticism, and the like, are all forces of a negative
character, acting in definite directions. To reduce or
entirely overcome these dissimilar retarding forces,
radically different methods must be employed. One knows,
for instance, what a fanatic may do, and one can take
preventive measures, can enlighten, convince, and,
possibly direct him, turn his vice into virtue; but one
does not know, and never can know, what a brute or an
imbecile may do, and one must deal with him as with a
mass, inert, without mind, let loose by the mad elements.
A negative force always implies some quality, not
infrequently a high one, though badly directed, which it
is possible to turn to good advantage; but a
directionless, frictional force involves unavoidable
loss. Evidently, then, the first and general answer to
the above question is: turn all negative force in the
right direction and reduce all frictional force.
There can be no doubt that, of all the frictional
resistances, the one that most retards human movement is
ignorance. Not without reason said that man of wisdom,
Buddha: "Ignorance is the greatest evil in the world."
The friction which results from ignorance, and which is
greatly increased owing to the numerous languages and
nationalities, can be reduced only by the spread of
knowledge and the unification of the heterogeneous
elements of humanity. No effort could be better spent.
But however ignorance may have retarded the onward
movement of man in times past, it is certain that,
nowadays, negative forces have become of greater
importance. Among these there is one of far greater
moment than any other. It is called organized warfare.
When we consider the millions of individuals, often the
ablest in mind and body, the flower of humanity, who are
compelled to a life of inactivity and unproductiveness,
the immense sums of money daily required for the
maintenance of armies and war apparatus, representing
ever so much of human energy, all the effort uselessly
spent in the production of arms and implements of
destruction, the loss of life and the fostering of a
barbarous spirit, we are appalled at the inestimable loss
to mankind which the existence of these deplorable
conditions must involve. What can we do to combat best
this great evil?
Law and order absolutely require the maintenance of
organized force. No community can exist and prosper
without rigid discipline. Every country must be able to
defend itself, should the necessity arise. The
conditions of to-day are not the result of yesterday, and
a radical change cannot be effected to-morrow. If the
nations would at once disarm, it is more than likely that
a state of things worse than war itself would follow.
Universal peace is a beautiful dream, but not at once
realizable. We have seen recently that even the nobel
effort of the man invested with the greatest worldly
power has been virtually without effect. And no wonder,
for the establishment of universal peace is, for the time
being, a physical impossibility. War is a negative
force, and cannot be turned in a positive direction
without passing through, the intermediate phases. It is
a problem of making a wheel, rotating one way, turn in
the opposite direction without slowing it down, stopping
it, and speeding it up again the other way.
It has been argued that the perfection of guns of
great destructive power will stop warfare. So I myself
thought for a long time, but now I believe this to be a
profound mistake. Such developments will greatly modify,
but not arrest it. On the contrary, I think that every
new arm that is invented, every new departure that is
made in this direction, merely invites new talent and
skill, engages new effort, offers new incentive, and so
only gives a fresh impetus to further development. Think
of the discovery of gun-powder. Can we conceive of any
more radical departure than was effected by this
innovation? Let us imagine ourselves living in that
period: would we not have thought then that warfare was
at an end, when the armor of the knight became an object
of ridicule, when bodily strength and skill, meaning so
much before, became of comparatively little value? Yet
gunpowder did not stop warfare: quite the opposite--it
acted as a most powerful incentive. Nor do I believe
that warfare can ever be arrested by any scientific or
ideal development, so long as similar conditions to those
prevailing now exist, because war has itself become a
science, and because war involves some of the most sacred
sentiments of which man is capable. In fact, it is
doubtful whether men who would not be ready to fight for
a high principle would be good for anything at all. It
is not the mind which makes man, nor is it the body; it
is mind and body. Our virtues and our failings are
inseparable, like force and matter. When they separate,
man is no more.
Another argument, which carries considerable force,
is frequently made, namely, that war must soon become
impossible be cause the means of defense are outstripping
the means of attack. This is only in accordance with a
fundamental law which may be expressed by the statement
that it is easier to destroy than to build. This law
defines human capacities and human conditions. Were
these such that it would be easier build than to destroy,
man would go on unresisted, creating and accumulating
without limit. Such conditions are not of this earth.
A being which could do this would not be a man: it might
be a god. Defense will always have the advantage over
attack, but this alone, it seems to me, can never stop
war. By the use of new principles of defense we can
render harbors impregnable against attack, but we cannot
by such means prevent two warships meeting in battle on
the high sea. And then, if we follow this idea to its
ultimate development, we are led to the conclusion that
it would be better for mankind if attack and defense were
just oppositely related; for if every country, even the
smallest, could surround itself with a wall absolutely
impenetrable, and could defy the rest of the world, a
state of things would surely be brought on which would be
extremely unfavorable to human progress. It is by
abolishing all the barriers which separate nations and
countries that civilization is best furthered.
Again, it is contended by some that the advent of
the flying-machine must bring on universal peace. This,
too, I believe to be an entirely erroneous view. The
flying-machine is certainly coming, and very soon, but
the conditions will remain the same as before. In fact,
I see no reason why a ruling power, like Great Britain,
might not govern the air as well as the sea. Without
wishing to put myself on record as a prophet, I do not
hesitate to say that the next years will see the
establishment of an "air-power," and its center may be
not far from New York. But, for all that, men will fight
on merrily.
The ideal development of the war principle would
ultimately lead to the transformation of the whole energy
of war into purely potential, explosive energy, like that
of an electrical condenser. In this form the war-energy
could be maintained without effort; it would need to be
much smaller in amount, while incomparably more
effective.
As regards the security of a country against foreign
invasion, it is interesting to note that it depends only
on the relative, and not the absolute, number of the
individuals or magnitude of the forces, and that, if
every country should reduce the war-force in the same
ratio, the security would remain unaltered. An
international agreement with the object of reducing to a
minimum the war-force which, in view of the present still
imperfect education of the masses, is absolutely
indispensable, would, therefore, seem to be the first
rational step to take toward diminishing the force
retarding human movement.
Fortunately, the existing conditions cannot continue
indefinitely, for a new element is beginning to assert
itself. A change for the better is eminent, and I shall
now endeavor to show what, according to my ideas, will be
the first advance toward the establishment of peaceful
relations between nations, and by what means it will
eventually be accomplished.
Let us go back to the early beginning, when the law
of the stronger was the only law. The light of reason
was not yet kindled, and the weak was entirely at the
mercy of the strong. The weak individual then began to
learn how to defend himself. He made use of a club,
stone, spear, sling, or bow and arrow, and in the course
of time, instead of physical strength, intelligence
became the chief deciding factor in the battle. The wild
character was gradually softened by the awakening of
noble sentiments, and so, imperceptibly, after ages of
continued progress, we have come from the brutal fight of
the unreasoning animal to what we call the "civilized
warfare" of to-day, in which the combatants shake hands,
talk in a friendly way, and smoke cigars in the
entr'actes, ready to engage again in deadly conflict at
a signal. Let pessimists say what they like, here is an
absolute evidence of great and gratifying advance.
But now, what is the next phase in this evolution?
Not peace as yet, by any means. The next change which
should naturally follow from modern developments should
be the continuous diminution of the number of individuals
engaged in battle. The apparatus will be one of
specifically great power, but only a few individuals will
be required to operate it. This evolution will bring
more and more into prominence a machine or mechanism with
the fewest individuals as an element of warfare, and the
absolutely unavoidable consequence of this will be the
abandonment of large, clumsy, slowly moving, and
unmanageable units. Greatest possible speed and maximum
rate of energy-delivery by the war apparatus will be the
main object. The loss of life will become smaller and
smaller, and finally, the number of the individuals
continuously diminishing, merely machines will meet in a
contest without blood-shed, the nations being simply
interested, ambitious spectators. When this happy
condition is realized, peace will be assured. But, no
matter to what degree of perfection rapid-fire guns,
high-power cannon, explosive projectiles, torpedo-boats,
or other implements of war may be brought, no matter how
destructive they may be made, that condition can never be
reached through any such development. All such
implements require men for their operation; men are
indispensable parts of the machinery. Their object is to
kill and to destroy. Their power resides in their
capacity for doing evil. So long as men meet in battle,
there will be bloodshed. Bloodshed will ever keep up
barbarous passion. To break this fierce spirit, a
radical departure must be made, an entirely new principle
must be introduced, something that never existed before
in warfare--a principle which will forcibly, unavoidably,
turn the battle into a mere spectacle, a play, a contest
without loss of blood. To bring on this result men must
be dispensed with: machine must fight machine. But how
accomplish that which seems impossible? The answer is
simple enough: produce a machine capable of acting as
though it were part of a human being--no mere mechanical
contrivance, comprising levers, screws, wheels, clutches,
and nothing more, but a machine embodying a higher
principle, which will enable it to per form its duties as
though it had intelligence, experience, judgment, a mind!
This conclusion is the result of my thoughts and
observations which have extended through virtually my
whole life, and I shall now briefly describe how I came
to accomplish that which at first seemed an unrealizable
dream.
A long time ago, when I was a boy, I was afflicted
with a singular trouble, which seems to have been due to
an extraordinary excitability of the retina. It was the
appearance of images which, by their persistence, marred
the vision of real objects and interfered with thought.
When a word was said to me, the image of the object which
it designated would appear vividly before my eyes, and
many times it was impossible for me to tell whether the
object I saw was real or not. This caused me great
discomfort and anxiety, and I tried hard to free myself
of the spell. But for a long time I tried in vain, and
it was not, as I clearly recollect, until I was about
twelve years old that I succeeded for the first time, by
an effort of the will, in banishing an image which
presented itself. My happiness will never be as complete
as it was then, but, unfortunately (as I thought at that
time), the old trouble returned, and with it my anxiety.
Here it was that the observations to which I refer began.
I noted, namely, that whenever the image of an object
appeared before my eyes I had seen something that
reminded me of it. In the first instances I thought this
to be purely accidental, but soon I convinced myself that
it was not so. A visual impression, consciously or
unconsciously received, invariably preceded the
appearance of the image. Gradually the desire arose in
me to find out, every time, what caused the images to
appear, and the satisfaction of this desire soon became
a necessity. The next observation I made was that, just
as these images followed as a result of something I had
seen, so also the thoughts which I conceived were
suggested in like manner. Again, I experienced the same
desire to locate the image which caused the thought, and
this search for the original visual impression soon grew
to be a second nature. Mt mind became automatic, as it
were, and in the course of years of continued, almost
unconscious performance, I acquired the ability of
locating every time and, as a rule, instantly the visual
impression which started the thought. Nor is this all.
It was not long before I was aware that also all my
movements were prompted in the same way, and so,
searching, observing, and verifying continuously, year by
year, I have, by every thought and every act of mine,
demonstrated, and do so daily, to my absolute
satisfaction, that I am an automaton endowed with power
of movement, which merely responds to external stimuli
beating upon my sense organs, and thinks and acts and
moves accordingly. I remember only one or two cases in
all my life in which I was unable to locate the first
impression which prompted a movement or a thought, or
even a dream.
[See Tesla--Man Out of Time photograph section.]
FIG. 2. THE FIRST PRACTICAL TELEAUTOMATON.
A machine having all the bodily or translatory
movements and the operations of the interior mechanism
controlled from a distance without wires. The crewless
boat shown in the photograph contains its own motive
power, propelling and steering machinery, and numerous
other accessories, all of which are controlled by
transmitting from a distance, without wires, electrical
oscillations to a circuit carried by the boat and
adjusted to respond only to these oscillations.
With these experiences it was only natural that,
long ago, I conceived the idea of constructing an
automaton which would mechanically represent me, and
which would respond, as I do myself, but, of course, in
a much more primitive manner, to external influences.
Such an automaton evidently had to have motive power,
organs for locomotion, directive organs, and one or more
sensitive organs so adapted as to be excited by external
stimuli. This machine would, I reasoned, perform its
movements in the manner of a living being, for it would
have all the chief mechanical characteristics or elements
of the same. There was still the capacity for growth,
propagation, and, above all, the mind which would be
wanting to make the model complete. But growth was not
necessary in this case, since a machine could be
manufactured fullgrown, so to speak. As to the capacity
for propagation, it could likewise be left out of
consideration, for in the mechanical model it merely
signified a process of manufacture. Whether the
automation be of flesh and bone, or of wood and steel, it
mattered little, provided it could perform all the duties
required of it like an intelligent being. To do so, it
had to have an element corresponding to the mind, which
would effect the control of all its movements and
operations, and cause it to act, in any unforseen case
that might present itself, with knowledge, reason,
judgement, and experience. But this element I could
easily embody in it by conveying to it my own
intelligence, my own understanding. So this invention
was evolved, and so a new art came into existence, for
which the name "telautomatics" has been suggested, which
means the art of controlling the movements and operations
of distant automatons. This principle evidently was
applicable to any kind of machine that moves on land or
in the water or in the air. In applying it practically
for the first time, I selected a boat (see Fig. 2). A
storage battery placed within it furnished the motive
power. The propeller, driven by a motor, represented the
locomotive organs. The rudder, controlled by another
motor likewise driven by the battery, took the place of
the directive organs. As to the sensitive organ,
obviously the first thought was to utilize a device
responsive to rays of light, like a selenium cell, to
represent the human eye. But upon closer inquiry I found
that, owing to experimental and other difficulties, no
thoroughly satisfactory control of the automaton could be
effected by light, radiant heat, hertzian radiations, or
by rays in general, that is, disturbances which pass in
straight lines through space. One of the reasons was
that any obstacle coming between the operator and the
distant automaton would place it beyond his control.
Another reason was that the sensitive device representing
the eye would have to be in a definite position with
respect to the distant controlling apparatus, and this
necessity would impose great limitations in the control.
Still another and very important reason was that, in
using rays, it would be difficult, if not impossible, to
give to the automaton individual features or
characteristics distinguishing it from other machines of
this kind. Evidently the automaton should respond only
to an individual call, as a person responds to a name.
Such considerations led me to conclude that the sensitive
device of the machine should correspond to the ear rather
than the eye of a human being, for in this case its
actions could be controlled irrespective of intervening
obstacles, regardless of its position relative to the
distant controlling apparatus, and, last, but not least,
it would remain deaf and unresponsive, like a faithful
servant, to all calls but that of its master.
Theserequirements made it imperative to use, in the
control of the automaton, instead of light or other rays,
waves or disturbances which propagate in all directions
through space, like sound, or which follow a path of
least resistance, however curved. I attained the result
aimed at by means of an electric circuit placed within
the boat, and adjusted, or "tuned," exactly to electrical
vibrations of the proper kind transmitted to it from a
distant "electrical oscillator." This circuit, in
responding, however feebly, to the transmitted
vibrations, affected magnets and other contrivances,
through the medium of which were controlled the movements
of the propeller and rudder, and also the operations of
numerous other appliances.
By the simple means described the knowledge,
experience, judgement--the mind, so to speak--of the
distant operator were embodied in that machine, which was
thus enabled to move and to perform all its operations
with reason and intelligence. It behaved just like a
blindfolded person obeying directions received through
the ear.
The automatons so far constructed had "borrowed
minds," so to speak, as each merely formed part of the
distant operator who conveyed to it his intelligent
orders; but this art is only in the beginning. I purpose
to show that, however impossible it may now seem, an
automaton may be contrived which will have its "own
mind," and by this I mean that it will be able,
independent of any operator, left entirely to itself, to
perform, in response to external influences affecting its
sensitive organs, a great variety of acts and operations
as if it had intelligence. It will be able to follow a
course laid out or to obey orders given far in advance;
it will be capable of distinguishing between what it
ought and what it ought not to do, and of making
experiences or, otherwise stated, of recording
impressions which will definitely affect its subsequent
actions. In fact, I have already conceived such a plan.
Although I evolved this invention many years ago and
explained it to my visitors very frequently in my
laboratory demonstrations, it was not until much later,
long after I had perfected it, that it became known,
when, naturally enough, it gave rise to much discussion
and to sensational reports. But the true significance of
this new art was not grasped by the majority, nor was the
great force of the underlying principle recognized. As
nearly as I could judge from the numerous comments which
appeared, the results I had obtained were considered as
entirely impossible. Even the few who were disposed to
admit the practicability of the invention saw in it
merely an automobile torpedo, which was to be used for
the purpose of blowing up battleships, with doubtful
success. The general impression was that I contemplated
simply the steering of such a vessel by means of Hertzian
or other rays. There are torpedoes steered electrically
by wires, and there are means of communicating without
wires, and the above was, of course an obvious inference.
Had I accomplished nothing more than this, I should have
made a small advance indeed. But the art I have evolved
does not contemplate merely the change of direction of a
moving vessel; it affords means of absolutely
controlling, in every respect, all the innumerable
translatory movements, as well as the operations of all
the internal organs, no matter how many, of an
individualized automaton. Criticisms to the effect that
the control of the automaton could be interfered with
were made by people who do not even dream of the
wonderful results which can be accomplished by use of
electrical vibrations. The world moves slowly, and new
truths are difficult to see. Certainly, by the use of
this principle, an arm for attack as well as defense may
be provided, of a destructiveness all the greater as the
principle is applicable to submarine and aërial vessels.
There is virtually no restriction as to the amount of
explosive it can carry, or as to the distance at which it
can strike, and failure is almost impossible. But the
force of this new principle does not wholly reside in its
destructiveness. Its advent introduces into warfare an
element which never existed before--a fighting-machine
without men as a means of attack and defense. The
continuous development in this direction must ultimately
make war a mere contest of machines without men and
without loss of life--a condition which would have been
impossible without this new departure, and which, in my
opinion, must be reached as preliminary to permanent
peace. The future will either bear out or disprove these
views. My ideas on this subject have been put forth with
deep conviction, but in a humble spirit.
The establishment of permanent peaceful relations
between nations would most effectively reduce the force
retarding the human mass, and would be the best solution
of this great human problem. But will the dream of
universal peace ever be realized? Let us hope that it
will. When all darkness shall be dissipated by the light
of science, when all nations shall be merged into one,
and patriotism shall be identical with religion, when
there shall be one language, one country, one end, then
the dream will have become reality.
THE THIRD PROBLEM: HOW TO INCREASE THE FORCE ACCELERATING
THE HUMAN MASS--THE HARNESSING OF THE SUN'S ENERGY.
Of the three possible solutions of the main problem of
increasing human energy, this is by far the most
important to consider, not only because of its intrinsic
significance, but also because of its intimate bearing on
all the many elements and conditions which determine the
movement of humanity. In order to proceed
systematically, it would be necessary for me to dwell on
all those considerations which have guided me from the
outset in my efforts to arrive at a solution, and which
have led me, step by step, to the results I shall now
describe. As a preliminary study of the problem an
analytical investigation, such as I have made, of the
chief forces which determine the onward movement, would
be of advantage, particularly in conveying an idea of
that hypothetical "velocity" which, as explained in the
beginning, is a measure of human energy; but to deal with
this specifically here, as I would desire, would lead me
far beyond the scope of the present subject. Suffice it
to state that the resultant of all these forces is always
in the direction of reason, which therefore, determines,
at any time, the direction of human movement. This is to
say that every effort which is scientifically applied,
rational, useful, or practical, must be in the direction
in which the mass is moving. The practical, rational
man, the observer, the man of business, he who reasons,
calculates, or determines in advance, carefully applies
his effort so that when coming into effect it will be in
the direction of the movement, making it thus most
efficient, and in this knowledge and ability lies the
secret of his success. Every new fact discovered, every
new experience or new element added to our knowledge and
entering into the domain of reason, affects the same and,
therefore, changes the direction of movement, which,
however, must always take place along the resultant of
all those efforts which, at that time, we designate as
reasonable, that is, self-preserving, useful, profitable,
or practical. These efforts concern our daily life, our
necessities and comforts, our work and business, and it
is these which drive man onward.
But looking at all this busy world about us, on all
this complex mass as it daily throbs and moves, what is
it but an immense clock-work driven by a spring? In the
morning, when we rise, we cannot fail to note that all
the objects about us are manufactured by machinery: the
water we use is lifted by steam-power; the trains bring
our breakfast from distant localities; the elevators in
our dwelling and our office building, the cars that carry
us there, are all driven by power; in all our daily
errands, and in our very life-pursuit, we depend upon it;
all the objects we see tell us of it; and when we return
to our machine-made dwelling at night, lest we should
forget it, all the material comforts of our home, our
cheering stove and lamp, remind us of how much we depend
on power. And when there is an accidental stoppage of
the machinery, when the city is snowbound, or the life
sustaining movement otherwise temporarily arrested, we
are affrighted to realize how impossible it would be for
us to live the life we live without motive power. Motive
power means work. To increase the force accelerating
human movement means, therefore, to perform more work.
So we find that the three possible solutions of the
great problem of increasing human energy are answered by
the three words: food, peace, work. Many a year I have
thought and pondered, lost myself in speculations and
theories, considering man as a mass moved by a force,
viewing his inexplicable movement in the light of a
mechanical one, and applying the simple principles of
mechanics to the analysis of the same until I arrived at
these solutions, only to realize that they were taught to
me in my early childhood. These three words sound the
key-notes of the Christian religion. Their scientific
meaning and purpose now clear to me: food to increase the
mass, peace to diminish the retarding force, and work to
increase the force accelerating human movement. These
are the only three solutions which are possible of that
great problem, and all of them have one object, one end,
namely, to increase human energy. When we recognize
this, we cannot help wondering how profoundly wise and
scientific and how immensely practical the Christian
religion is, and in what a marked contrast it stands in
this respect to other religions. It is unmistakably the
result of practical experiment and scientific observation
which have extended through the ages, while other
religions seem to be the outcome of merely abstract
reasoning. Work, untiring effort, useful and
accumulative, with periods of rest and recuperation
aiming at higher efficiency, is its chief and ever-recurring
command. Thus we are inspired both by
Christianity and Science to do our utmost toward
increasing the performance of mankind. This most
important of human problems I shall now specifically
consider.
THE SOURCE OF HUMAN ENERGY--THE THREE WAYS OF DRAWING
ENERGY FROM THE SUN.
First let us ask: Whence comes all the motive power?
What is the spring that drives all? We see the ocean
rise and fall, the rivers flow, the wind, rain, hail, and
snow beat on our windows, the trains and steamers come
and go; we here the rattling noise of carriages, the
voices from the street; we feel, smell, and taste; and we
think of all this. And all this movement, from the
surging of the mighty ocean to that subtle movement
concerned in our thought, has but one common cause. All
this energy emanates from one single center, one single
source--the sun. The sun is the spring that drives all.
The sun maintains all human life and supplies all human
energy. Another answer we have now found to the above
great question: To increase the force accelerating human
movement means to turn to the uses of man more of the
sun's energy. We honor and revere those great men of
bygone times whose names are linked with immortal
achievements, who have proved themselves benefactors of
humanity--the religious reformer with his wise maxims of
life, the philosopher with his deep truths, the
mathematician with his formulæ, the physicist with his
laws, the discover with his principles and secrets
wrested from nature, the artist with his forms of the
beautiful; but who honors him, the greatest of all,--who
can tell the name of him,--who first turned to use the
sun's energy to save the effort of a weak fellow-creature?
That was man's first act of scientific
philanthropy, and its consequences have been
incalculable.
From the very beginning three ways of drawing energy
from the sun were open to man. The savage, when he
warmed his frozen limbs at a fire kindled in some way,
availed himself of the energy of the sun stored in the
burning material. When he carried a bundle of branches
to his cave and burned them there, he made use of the
sun's stored energy transported from one to another
locality. When he set sail to his canoe, he utilized the
energy of the sun applied to the atmosphere or the
ambient medium. There can be no doubt that the first is
the oldest way. A fire, found accidentally, taught the
savage to appreciate its beneficial heat. He then very
likely conceived of the idea of carrying the glowing
members to his abode. Finally he learned to use the
force of a swift current of water or air. It is
characteristic of modern development that progress has
been effected in the same order. The utilization of the
energy stored in wood or coal, or, generally speaking,
fuel, led to the steam-engine. Next a great stride in
advance was made in energy-transportation by the use of
electricity, which permitted the transfer of energy from
one locality to another without transporting the
material. But as to the utilization of the energy of the
ambient medium, no radical step forward has as yet been
made known.
The ultimate results of development in these three
directions are: first, the burning of coal by a cold
process in a battery; second, the efficient utilization
of the energy of the ambient medium; and, third the
transmission without wires of electrical energy to any
distance. In whatever way these results may be arrived
at, their practical application will necessarily involve
an extensive use of iron, and this invaluable metal will
undoubtedly be an essential element in the further
development along these three lines. If we succeed in
burning coal by a cold process and thus obtain electrical
energy in an efficient and inexpensive manner, we shall
require in many practical uses of this energy electric
motors--that is, iron. If we are successful in deriving
energy from the ambient medium, we shall need, both in
the obtainment and utilization of the energy, machinery--again,
iron. If we realize the transmission of
electrical energy without wires on an industrial scale,
we shall be compelled to use extensively electric
generators--once more, iron. Whatever we may do, iron
will probably be the chief means of accomplishment in the
near future, possibly more so than in the past. How long
its reign will last is difficult to tell, for even now
aluminium is looming up as a threatening competitor. But
for the time being, next to providing new resources of
energy, it is of the greatest importance to making
improvements in the manufacture and utilization of iron.
Great advances are possible in these latter directions,
which, if brought about, would enormously increase the
useful performance of mankind.
GREAT POSSIBILITIES OFFERED BY IRON FOR INCREASING HUMAN
PERFORMANCE--ENORMOUS WASTE IN IRON MANUFACTURE.
Iron is by far the most important factor in modern
progress. It contributes more than any other industrial
product to the force accelerating human movement. So
general is the use of this metal, and so intimately is it
connected with all that concerns our life, that it has
become as indispensable to us as the very air we breathe.
Its name is synonymous with usefulness. But, however
great the influence of iron may be on the present human
development, it does not add to the force urging man
onward nearly as much as it might. First of all, its
manufacture as now carried on is connected with an
appalling waste of fuel--that is, waste of energy. Then,
again, only a part of all the iron produced is applied
for useful purposes. A good part of it goes to create
frictional resistances, while still another large part is
the means of developing negative forces greatly retarding
human movement. Thus the negative force of war is almost
wholly represented in iron. It is impossible to estimate
with any degree of accuracy the magnitude of this
greatest of all retarding forces, but it is certainly
very considerable. If the present positive impelling
force due to all useful applications of iron be
represented by ten, for instance, I should not think it
exaggeration to estimate the negative force of war, with
due consideration of all its retarding influences and
results, at, say, six. On the basis of this estimate the
effective impelling force of iron in the positive
direction would be measured by the difference of these
two numbers, which is four. But if, through the
establishment of universal peace, the manufacture of war
machinery should cease, and all struggle for supremacy
between nations should be turned into healthful, ever
active and productive commercial competition, then the
positive impelling force due to iron would be measured by
the sum of those two, numbers, which is sixteen--that is,
this force would have four times its present value. This
example is, of course, merely intended to give an idea of
the immense increase in the useful performance of mankind
which would result from a radical reform of the iron
industries supplying the implements of warfare.
A similar inestimable advantage in the saving of
energy available to man would be secured by obviating the
great waste of coal which is inseparably connected with
the present methods of manufacturing iron. In some
countries, such as Great Britain, the hurtful effects of
this squandering of fuel are beginning to be felt. The
price of coal is constantly rising, and the poor are made
to suffer more and more. Though we are still far from
the dreaded "exhaustion of the coal-fields," philanthropy
commands us to invent novel methods of manufacturing
iron, which will not involve such barbarous waste of this
valuable material from which we derive at present most of
our energy. It is our duty to coming generations to
leave this store of energy intact for them, or at least
not to touch it until we shall have perfected processes
for burning coal more efficiently. Those who are coming
after us will need fuel more than we do. We should be
able to manufacture the iron we require by using the
sun's energy, without wasting any coal at all. As an
effort to this end the idea of smelting iron ores by
electric currents obtained from the energy of falling
water has naturally suggested itself to many. I have
myself spent much time in endeavoring to evolve such a
practical process, which would enable iron to be
manufactured at small cost. After a prolonged
investigation of the subject, finding that it was
unprofitable to use the currents generated directly for
smelting the ore, I devised a method which is far more
economical.
ECONOMICAL PRODUCTION OF IRON BY A NEW PROCESS.
The industrial project, as I worked it out six years ago,
contemplated the employment of the electric currents
derived from the energy of a waterfall, not directly for
smelting the ore, but for decomposing water for a
preliminary step. To lessen the cost of the plant, I
proposed to generate the currents in exceptionally cheap
and simple dynamos, which I designed for this sole
purpose. The hydrogen liberated in the electrolytic
decomposition was to be burned or recombined with oxygen,
not with that from which it was separated, but with that
of the atmosphere. Thus very nearly the total electrical
energy used up in the decomposition of the water would be
recovered in the form of heat resulting from the
recombination of the hydrogen. This heat was to be
applied to the smelting of ore. The oxygen gained as a
by-product of the decomposition of the water I intended
to use for certain other industrial purposes, which would
probably yield good financial returns, inasmuch as this
is the cheapest way of obtaining this gas in large
quantities. In any event, it could be employed to burn
all kinds of refuse, cheap hydrocarbon, or coal of the
most inferior quality which could not be burned in air or
be otherwise utilized to advantage, and thus again a
considerable amount of heat would be made available for
the smelting of the ore. To increase the economy of the
process I contemplated, furthermore, using an arrangement
such that the hot metal and the products of combustion,
coming out of the furnace, would give up their heat upon
the cold ore going into the furnace, so that
comparatively little of the heat energy would be lost in
the smelting. I calculated that probably forty thousand
pounds of iron could be produced per horse-power per
annum by this method. Liberal allowances were made for
those losses which are unavoidable, the above quantity
being about half of that theoretically obtainable.
Relying on this estimate and on practical data with
reference to a certain kind of sand ore existing in
abundance in the region of the Great Lakes, including
cost of transportation and labor, I found that in some
localities iron could be manufactured in this manner
cheaper than by any of the adopted methods. This result
would be obtained all the more surely if the oxygen
obtained from the water, instead of being used for
smelting of ore, as assumed, should be more profitably
employed. Any new demand for this gas would secure a
higher revenue from the plant, thus cheapening the iron.
This project was advanced merely in the interest of
industry. Some day, I hope, a beautiful industrial
butterfly will come out of the dusty and shriveled
chrysalis.
The production of iron from sand ores by a process
of magnetic separation is highly commendable in
principle, since it involves no waste of coal; but the
usefulness of this method is largely reduced by the
necessity of melting the iron afterward. As to the
crushing of iron ore, I would consider it rational only
if done by water-power, or by energy otherwise obtained
without consumption of fuel. An electrolytic cold
process, which would make it possible to extract iron
cheaply, and also to mold it into the required forms
without any fuel consumption, would, in my opinion, be a
very great advance in iron manufacture. In common with
some other metals, iron has so far resisted electrolytic
treatment, but there can be no doubt that such a cold
process will ultimately replace in metallurgy the present
crude method of casting, and thus obviating the enormous
waste of fuel necessitated by the repeated heating of
metal in the foundries.
Up to a few decades ago the usefulness of iron was
based almost wholly on its remarkable mechanical
properties, but since the advent of the commercial dynamo
and electric motor its value to mankind has been greatly
increased by its unique magnetic qualities. As regards
the latter, iron has been greatly improved of late. The
signal progress began about thirteen years ago, when I
discovered that in using soft Bessemer steel instead of
wrought iron, as then customary, in an alternating motor,
the performance of the machine was doubled. I brought
this fact to the attention of Mr. Albert Schmid, to whose
untiring efforts and ability is largely due the supremacy
of American electrical machinery, and who was then
superintendent of an industrial corporation engaged in
this field. Following my suggestion, he constructed
transformers of steel, and they showed the same marked
improvement. The investigation was then systematically
continued under Mr. Schmid's guidance, the impurities
being gradually eliminated from the "steel" (which was
only such in name, for in reality it was pure soft iron),
and soon a product resulted which admitted of little
further improvement.
THE COMING OF AGE OF ALUMINIUM--DOOM OF THE COPPER
INDUSTRY--THE GREAT CIVILIZING POTENCY OF THE NEW METAL.
With the advances made in iron of late years we have
arrived virtually at the limits of improvement. We
cannot hope to increase very materially its tensile
strength, elasticity, hardness, or malleability, nor can
we expect to make it much better as regards its magnetic
qualities. More recently a notable gain was secured by
the mixture of a small percentage of nickel with the
iron, but there is not much room for further advance in
this direction. New discoveries may be expected, but
they cannot greatly add to the valuable properties of the
metal, though they may considerably reduce the cost of
manufacture. The immediate future of iron is assured by
its cheapness and its unrivaled mechanical and magnetic
qualities. These are such that no other product can
compete with it now. But there can be no doubt that, at
a time not very distant, iron, in many of its now
uncontested domains, will have to pass the scepter to
another: the coming age will be the age of aluminium. It
is only seventy years since this wonderful metal was
discovered by Woehler, and the aluminium industry,
scarcely forty years old, commands already the attention
of the entire world. Such rapid growth has not been
recorded in the history of civilization before. Not long
ago aluminium was sold at the fanciful price of thirty or
forty dollars per pound; to-day it can be had in any
desired amount for as many cents. What is more, the time
is not far off when this price, too, will be considered
fanciful, for great improvements are possible in the
methods of its manufacture. Most of the metal is now
produced in the electric furnace by a process combining
fusion and electrolysis, which offers a number of
advantageous features, but involves naturally a great
waste of the electrical energy of the current. My
estimates show that the price of aluminium could be
considerably reduced by adopting in its manufacture a
method similar to that proposed by me for the production
of iron. A pound of aluminium requires for fusion only
about seventy per cent. of the heat needed for melting a
pound of iron, and inasmuch as its weight is only about
one third of that of the latter, a volume of aluminium
four times that of iron could be obtained from a given
amount of heat-energy. But a cold electrolytic process
of manufacture is the ideal solution, and on this I have
placed my hope.
The absolutely unavoidable consequence of the
advancement of the aluminium industry will be the
annihilation of the copper industry. They cannot exist
and prosper to-gether, and the latter is doomed beyond
any hope of recovery. Even now it is cheaper to convey
an electric current through aluminium wires than through
copper wires; aluminium castings cost less, and in many
domestic and other uses copper has no chance of
successfully competing. A further material reduction of
the price of aluminium cannot but be fatal to copper.
But the progress of the former will not go on unchecked,
for, as it ever happens in such cases, the larger
industry will absorb the smaller one: the giant copper
interests will control the pygmy aluminium interests, and
the slow-pacing copper will reduce the lively gait of
aluminium. This will only delay, not avoid the impending
catastrophe.
Aluminium, however, will not stop at downing copper.
Before many years have passed it will be engaged in a
fierce struggle with iron, and in the latter it will find
an adversary not easy to conquer. The issue of the
contest will largely depend on whether iron shall be
indispensable in electric machinery. This the future
alone can decide. The magnetism as exhibited in iron is
an isolated phenomenon in nature. What it is that makes
this metal behave so radically different from all other
materials in this respect has not yet been ascertained,
though many theories have been suggested. As regards
magnetism, the molecules of the various bodies behave
like hollow beams partly filled with a heavy fluid and
balanced in the middle in the manner of a see-saw.
Evidently some disturbing influence exists in nature
which causes each molecule, like such a beam, to tilt
either one or the other way. If the molecules are tilted
one way, the body is magnetic; if they are tilted the
other way, the body is non-magnetic; but both positions
are stable, as they would be in the case of the hollow
beam, owing to the rush of the fluid to the lower end.
Now, the wonderful thing is that the molecules of all
known bodies went one way, while those of iron went the
other way. This metal, it would seem, has an origin
entirely different from that of the rest of the globe.
It is highly improbable that we shall discover some other
and cheaper material which will equal or surpass iron in
magnetic qualities.
Unless we should make a radical departure in the
character of the electric currents employed, iron will be
indispensable. Yet the advantages it offers are only
apparent. So long as we use feeble magnetic forces it is
by far superior to any other material; but if we find
ways of producing great magnetic forces, than better
results will be obtainable without it. In fact, I have
already produced electric transformers in which no iron
is employed, and which are capable of performing ten
times as much work per pound of weight as those of iron.
This result is attained by using electric currents of a
very high rate of vibration, produced in novel ways,
instead of the ordinary currents now employed in the
industries. I have also succeeded in operating electric
motors without iron by such rapidly vibrating currents,
but the results, so far, have been inferior to those
obtained with ordinary motors constructed of iron,
although theoretically the former should be capable of
performing incomparably more work per unit of weight than
the latter. But the seemingly insuperable difficulties
which are now in the way may be overcome in the end, and
then iron will be done away with, and all electric
machinery will be manufactured of aluminium, in all
probability, at prices ridiculously low. This would be
a severe, if not fatal, blow to iron. In many other
branches of industry, as ship-building, or wherever
lightness of structure is required, the progress of the
new metal will be much quicker. For such uses it is
eminently suitable, and is sure to supersede iron sooner
or later. It is highly probable that in the course of
time we shall be able to give it many of those qualities
which make iron so valuable.
While it is impossible to tell when this industrial
revolution will be consummated, there can be no doubt
that the future belongs to aluminium, and that in times
to come it will be the chief means of increasing human
performance. It has in this respect capacities greater
by far than those of any other metal. I should estimate
its civilizing potency at fully one hundred times that of
iron. This estimate, though it may astonish, is not at
all exaggerated. First of all, we must remember that
there is thirty times as much aluminium as iron in bulk,
available for the uses of man. This in itself offers
great possibilities. Then, again, the new metal is much
more easily workable, which adds to its value. In many
of its properties it partakes of the character of a
precious metal, which gives it additional worth. Its
electric conductivity, which, for a given weight, is
greater than that of any other metal, would be alone
sufficient to make it one of the most important factors
in future human progress. Its extreme lightness makes it
far more easy to transport the objects manufactured. By
virtue of this property it will revolutionize naval
construction, and in facilitating transport and travel it
will add enormously to the useful performance of mankind.
But its greatest civilizing property will be, I believe,
in aërial travel, which is sure to be brought about by
means of it. Telegraphic instruments will slowly
enlighten the barbarian. Electric motors and lamps will
do it more quickly, but quicker than anything else the
flying-machine will do it. By rendering travel ideally
easy it will be the best means for unifying the
heterogeneous elements of humanity. As the first step
toward this realization we should produce a lighter
storage-battery or get more energy from coal.
EFFORTS TOWARD OBTAINING MORE ENERGY FROM COAL--THE
ELECTRIC TRANSMISSION--THE GAS-ENGINE--THE COLD-COAL
BATTERY.
I remember that at one time I considered the production
of electricity by burning coal in a battery as the
greatest achievement toward the advancing civilization,
and I am surprised to find how much the continuous study
of these subjects has modified my views. It now seems to
me that to burn coal, however efficiently, in a battery
would be a mere makeshift, a phase in the evolution
toward something much more perfect. After all, in
generating electricity in this manner, we should be
destroying material, and this would be a barbarous
process. We ought to be able to obtain the energy we
need without consumption of material. But I am far from
underrating the value of such an efficient method of
burning fuel. At the present time most motive power
comes from coal, and, either directly or by its products,
it adds vastly to human energy. Unfortunately, in all
the process now adopted, the larger portion of the energy
of the coal is uselessly dissipated. The best steam-engines
utilize only a small part of the total energy.
Even in gas-engines, in which, particularly of late,
better results are obtainable, there is still a barbarous
waste going on. In our electric-lighting systems we
scarcely utilize one third of one per cent., and in
lighting by gas a much smaller fraction, of the total
energy of the coal. Considering the various uses of coal
throughout the world, we certainly do not utilize more
than two per cent. of its energy theoretically available.
The man who should stop this senseless waste would be a
great benefactor of humanity, though the solution he
would offer could not be a permanent one, since it would
ultimately lead to the exhaustion of the store of
material. Efforts toward obtaining more energy from coal
are now being made chiefly in two directions--by
generating electricity and by producing gas for motive-power purposes.
In both of these lines notable success
has already been achieved.
The advent of the alternating-current system of
electric power-transmission marks an epoch in the economy
of energy available to man from coal. Evidently all
electrical energy obtained from a waterfall, saving so
much fuel, is a net gain to mankind, which is all the
more effective as it is secured with little expenditure
of human effort, and as this most perfect of all known
methods of deriving energy from the sun contributes in
many ways to the advancement of civilization. But
electricity enables us also to get from coal much more
energy than was practicable in the old ways. Instead of
transporting the coal to distant places of consumption,
we burn it near the mine, develop electricity in the
dynamos, and transmit the current to remote localities,
thus effecting a considerable saving. Instead of driving
the machinery in a factory in the old wasteful way of
belts and shafting, we generate electricity by steam-power
and operate electric motors. In this manner it is
not uncommon to obtain two or three times as much
effective motive power from the fuel, besides securing
many other important advantages. It is in this field as
much as in the transmission of energy to great distance
that the alternating system, with its ideally simple
machinery, is bringing about an industrial revolution.
But in many lines this progress has not been yet fully
felt. For example, steamers and trains are still being
propelled by the direct application of steam-power to
shafts or axles. A much greater percentage of the heat-energy
of the fuel could be transformed into motive
energy by using, in place of the adopted marine engines
and locomotives, dynamos driven by specially designed
high-pressure steam- or gas-engines and by utilizing the
electricity generated for the propulsion. A gain of
fifty to one hundred per cent. in the effective energy
derived from the coal could be secured in this manner.
It is difficulty to understand why a fact so plain and
obvious is not receiving more attention from engineers.
In ocean steamers such an improvement would be
particularly desirable, as it would do away with noise
and increase materially the speed and the carrying
capacity of the liners.
Still more energy is now being obtained from coal by
the latest improved gas-engine, the economy of which is,
on the average, probably twice that of the best steam-engine.
The introduction of the gas-engine is very much
facilitated by the importance of the gas industry. With
the increasing use of the electric light more and more of
the gas is utilized for heating and motive-power
purposes. In many instances gas is manufactured close to
the coal-mine and conveyed to distant places of
consumption, a considerable saving both in cost of
transportation and in utilization of the energy of the
fuel being thus effected. In the present state of the
mechanical and electrical arts the most rational way of
deriving energy from coal is evidently to manufacture gas
close to the coal store, and to utilize it, either on the
spot or elsewhere, to generate electricity for industrial
uses in dynamos driven by gas engines. The commercial
success of such a plant is largely dependent upon the
production of gas-engines of great nominal horse-power,
which, judging from the keen activity in this field will
soon be forthcoming. Instead of consuming coal directly,
as usual, gas should be manufactured from it and burned
to economize energy.
But all such improvements cannot be more than
passing phases in the evolution toward something far more
perfect, for ultimately we must succeed in obtaining
electricity from coal in a more direct way, involving no
great loss of heat-energy. Whether coal can be oxidized
by a cold process is still a question. Its combination
with oxygen always involves heat, and whether the energy
of the combination of the carbon with another element can
be turned directly into electrical energy has not yet
been determined. Under certain conditions nitric acid
will burn the carbon, generating an electric current, but
the solution does not remain cold. Other means of
oxidizing coal have been proposed, but they have offered
no promise of leading to an efficient process. My own
lack of success has been complete, though perhaps not
quite so complete as that of some who have "perfected"
the cold-coal battery. This problem is essentially one
for the chemist to solve. It is not for the physicist,
who determines all his results in advance, so that, when
the experiment is tried, it cannot fail. Chemistry,
though a positive science, does not yet admit of a
solution by such positive methods as those which are
available in the treatment of many physical problems.
The result, if possible, will be arrived at through
patent trying rather than through deduction or
calculation. The time will soon come, however, when the
chemist will be able to follow a course clearly mapped
out beforehand, and when the process of his arriving at
a desired result will be purely constructive. The cold-coal
battery would give a great impetus to electrical
development; it would lead very shortly to a practical
flying-machine, and would enormously enhance the
introduction of the automobile. But these and many other
problems will be better solved, and in a more scientific
manner, by a light storage battery.
ENERGY FROM THE MEDIUM--THE WINDMILL AND THE SOLAR
ENGINE,--MOTIVE POWER FROM TERRESTRIAL HEAT--ELECTRICITY
FROM NATURAL SOURCES.
Besides fuel, there is abundant material from which we
might eventually derive power. An immense amount of
energy is locked up in limestone, for instance, and
machines can be driven by liberating the carbonic acid
through sulphuric acid or otherwise. I once constructed
such an engine, and it operated satisfactorily.
But, whatever our resources of primary energy may be
in the future, we must, to be rational, obtain it without
consumption of any material. Long ago I came to this
conclusion, and to arrive at this result only two ways,
as before indicated, appeared possible -- either to turn
to use the energy of the sun stored in the ambient
medium, or to transmit, through the medium, the sun's
energy to distant places from some locality where it was
obtainable without consumption of material. At that time
I at once rejected the latter method as entirely
impracticable, and turned to examine the possibilities of
the former.
It is difficult to believe, but it is, nevertheless,
a fact, that since time immemorial man has had at his
disposal a fairly good machine which has enabled him to
utilize the energy of the ambient medium. This machine
is the windmill. Contrary to popular belief, the power
obtainable from wind is very considerable. Many a
deluded inventor has spent years of his life in
endeavoring to "harness the tides," and some have even
proposed to compress air by tide- or wave-power for
supplying energy, never understanding the signs of the
old windmill on the hill, as it sorrowfully waved its
arms about and bade them stop. The fact is that a wave-
or tide-motor would have, as a rule, but a small chance
of competing commercially with the windmill, which is by
far the better machine, allowing a much greater amount of
energy to be obtained in a simpler way. Wind-power has
been, in old times, of inestimable value to man, if for
nothing else but for enabling him, to cross the seas, and
it is even now a very important factor in travel and
transportation. But there are great limitations in this
ideally simple method of utilizing the sun's energy. The
machines are large for a given output, and the power is
intermittent, thus necessitating the storage of energy
and increasing the cost of the plant.
A far better way, however, to obtain power would be
to avail ourselves of the sun's rays, which beat the
earth incessantly and supply energy at a maximum rate of
over four million horsepower per square mile. Although
the average energy received per square mile in any
locality during the year is only a small fraction of that
amount, yet an inexhaustible source of power would be
opened up by the discovery of some efficient method of
utilizing the energy of the rays. The only rational way
known to me at the time when I began the study of this
subject was to employ some kind of heat- or
thermodynamic-engine, driven by a volatile fluid
evaporate in a boiler by the heat of the rays. But
closer investigation of this method, and calculation,
showed that, notwithstanding the apparently vast amount
of energy received from the sun's rays, only a small
fraction of that energy could be actually utilized in
this manner. Furthermore, the energy supplied through
the sun's radiations is periodical, and the same
limitations as in the use of the windmill I found to
exist here also. After a long study of this mode of
obtaining motive power from the sun, taking into account
the necessarily large bulk of the boiler, the low
efficiency of the heat-engine, the additional cost of
storing the energy and other drawbacks, I came to the
conclusion that the "solar engine," a few instances
excepted, could not be industrially exploited with
success.
Another way of getting motive power from the medium
without consuming any material would be to utilize the
heat contained in the earth, the water, or the air for
driving an engine. It is a well-known fact that the
interior portions of the globe are very hot, the
temperature rising, as observations show, with the
approach to the center at the rate of approximately 1
degree C. for every hundred feet of depth. The
difficulties of sinking shafts and placing boilers at
depths of, say, twelve thousand feet, corresponding to an
increase in temperature of about 120 degrees C., are not
insuperable, and we could certainly avail ourselves in
this way of the internal heat of the globe. In fact, it
would not be necessary to go to any depth at all in order
to derive energy from the stored terrestrial heat. The
superficial layers of the earth and the air strata close
to the same are at a temperature sufficiently high to
evaporate some extremely volatile substances, which we
might use in our boilers instead of water. There is no
doubt that a vessel might be propelled on the ocean by an
engine driven by such a volatile fluid, no other energy
being used but the heat abstracted from the water. But
the amount of power which could be obtained in this
manner would be, without further provision, very small.
Electricity produced by natural causes is another
source of energy which might be rendered available.
Lightning discharges involve great amounts of electrical
energy, which we could utilize by transforming and
storing it. Some years ago I made known a method of
electrical transformation which renders the first part of
this task easy, but the storing of the energy of
lightning discharges will be difficult to accomplish. It
is well known, furthermore, that electric currents
circulate constantly through the earth, and that there
exists between the earth and any air stratum a difference
of electrical pressure, which varies in proportion to the
height.
In recent experiments I have discovered two novel
facts of importance in this connection. One of these
facts is that an electric current is generated in a wire
extending from the ground to a great height by the axial,
and probably also by the translatory, movement of the
earth. No appreciable current, however, will flow
continuously in the wire unless the electricity is
allowed to leak out into the air. Its escape is greatly
facilitated by providing at the elevated end of the wire
a conducting terminal of great surface, with many sharp
edges or points. We are thus enabled to get a continuous
supply of electrical energy by merely supporting a wire
at a height, but, unfortunately, the amount of
electricity which can be so obtained is small.
The second fact which I have ascertained is that the
upper air strata are permanently charged with electricity
opposite to that of the earth. So, at least, I have
interpreted my observations, from which it appears that
the earth, with its adjacent insulating and outer
conducting envelope, constitutes a highly charged
electrical condenser containing, in all probability, a
great amount of electrical energy which might be turned
to the uses of man, if it were possible to reach with a
wire to great altitudes.
It is possible, and even probable, that there will
be, in time, other resources of energy opened up, of
which we have no knowledge now. We may even find ways of
applying forces such as magnetism or gravity for driving
machinery without using any other means. Such
realizations, though highly improbable, are not
impossible. An example will best convey an idea of what
we can hope to attain and what we can never attain.
Imagine a disk of some homogeneous material turned
perfectly true and arranged to turn in frictionless
bearings on a horizontal shaft above the ground. This
disk, being under the above conditions perfectly
balanced, would rest in any position. Now, it is
possible that we may learn how to make such a disk rotate
continuously and perform work by the force of gravity
without any further effort on our part; but it is
perfectly impossible for the disk to turn and to do work
without any force from the outside. If it could do so,
it would be what is designated scientifically as a
"perpetuum mobile," a machine creating its own motive
power. To make the disk rotate by the force of gravity
we have only to invent a screen against this force. By
such a screen we could prevent this force from acting on
one half of the disk, and the rotation of the latter
would follow. At least, we cannot deny such a
possibility until we know exactly the nature of the force
of gravity. Suppose that this force were due to a
movement comparable to that of a stream of air passing
from above toward the center of the earth. The effect of
such a stream upon both halves of the disk would be
equal, and the latter would not rotate ordinarily; but if
one half should be guarded by a plate arresting the
movement, then it would turn.
A DEPARTURE FROM KNOWN METHODS--POSSIBILITY OF A "SELF-ACTING" ENGINE OR MACHINE,
INANIMATE, YET CAPABLE, LIKE A LIVING BEING, OF DERIVING ENERGY FROM THE MEDIUM--THE
IDEAL WAY OF OBTAINING MOTIVE POWER.
When I began the investigation of the subject under
consideration, and when the preceding or similar ideas
presented themselves to me for the first time, though I
was then unacquainted with a number of the facts
mentioned, a survey of the various ways of utilizing the
energy of the medium convinced me, nevertheless, that to
arrive at a thoroughly satisfactory practical solution a
radical departure from the methods then known had to be
made. The windmill, the solar engine, the engine driven
by terrestrial heat, had their limitations in the amount
of power obtainable. Some new way had to be discovered
which would enable us to get more energy. There was
enough heat-energy in the medium, but only a small part
of it was available for the operation of an engine in the
ways then known. Besides, the energy was obtainable only
at a very slow rate. Clearly, then, the problem was to
discover some new method which would make it possible
both to utilize more of the heat-energy of the medium and
also to draw it away from the same at a more rapid rate.
I was vainly endeavoring to form an idea of how this
might be accomplished, when I read some statements from
Carnot and Lord Kelvin (then Sir William Thomson) which
meant virtually that it is impossible for an inanimate
mechanism or self-acting machine to cool a portion of the
medium below the temperature of the surrounding, and
operate by the heat abstracted. These statements
interested me intensely. Evidently a living being could
do this very thing, and since the experiences of my early
life which I have related had convinced me that a living
being is only an automaton, or, otherwise stated, a
"self-acting-engine," I came to the conclusion that it
was possible to construct a machine which would do the
same. As the first step toward this realization I
conceived the following mechanism. Imagine a thermopile
consisting of a number of bars of metal extending from
the earth to the outer space beyond the atmosphere. The
heat from below, conducted upward along these metal bars,
would cool the earth or the sea or the air, according to
the location of the lower parts of the bars, and the
result, as is well known, would be an electric current
circulating in these bars. The two terminals of the
thermopile could now be joined through an electric motor,
and, theoretically, this motor would run on and on, until
the media below would be cooled down to the temperature
of the outer space. This would be an inanimate engine
which, to all evidence, would be cooling a portion of the
medium below the temperature of the surrounding, and
operating by the heat abstracted.

DIAGRAM b. OBTAINING ENERGY FROM THE AMBIENT MEDIUM
A, medium with
little energy; B, B, ambient medium with
much energy; O, path of the energy.
But was it not possible to realize a similar
condition without necessarily going to a height?
Conceive, for the sake of illustration, [a cylindrical]
enclosure T, as illustrated in diagram b, such that
energy could not be transferred across it except through
a channel or path O, and that, by some means or other, in
this enclosure a medium were maintained which would have
little energy, and that on the outer side of the same
there would be the ordinary ambient medium with much
energy. Under these assumptions the energy would flow
through the path O, as indicated by the arrow, and might
then be converted on its passage into some other form of
energy. The question was, Could such a condition be
attained? Could we produce artificially such a "sink"
for the energy of the ambient medium to flow in? Suppose
that an extremely low temperature could be maintained by
some process in a given space; the surrounding medium
would then be compelled to give off heat, which could be
converted into mechanical or other form of energy, and
utilized. By realizing such a plan, we should be enabled
to get at any point of the globe a continuous supply of
energy, day and night. More than this, reasoning in the
abstract, it would seem possible to cause a quick
circulation of the medium, and thus draw the energy at a
very rapid rate.
Here, then, was an idea which, if realizable,
afforded a happy solution of the problem of getting
energy from the medium. But was it realizable? I
convinced myself that it was so in a number of ways, of
which one is the following. As regards heat, we are at
a high level, which may be represented by the surface of
a mountain lake considerably above the sea, the level of
which may mark the absolute zero of temperature existing
in the interstellar space. Heat, like water, flows from
high to low level, and, consequently, just as we can let
the water of the lake run down to the sea, so we are able
to let heat from the earth's surface travel up into the
cold region above. Heat, like water, can perform work in
flowing down, and if we had any doubt as to whether we
could derive energy from the medium by means of a
thermopile, as before described, it would be dispelled by
this analogue. But can we produce cold in a given
portion of the space and cause the heat to flow in
continually? To create such a "sink," or "cold hole," as
we might say, in the medium, would be equivalent to
producing in the lake a space either empty or filled with
something much lighter than water. This we could do by
placing in the lake a tank, and pumping all the water out
of the latter. We know, then, that the water, if allowed
to flow back into the tank, would, theoretically, be able
to perform exactly the same amount of work which was used
in pumping it out, but not a bit more. Consequently
nothing could be gained in this double operation of first
raising the water and then letting it fall down. This
would mean that it is impossible to create such a sink in
the medium. But let us reflect a moment. Heat, though
following certain general laws of mechanics, like a
fluid, is not such; it is energy which may be converted
into other forms of energy as it passes from a high to a
low level. To make our mechanical analogy complete and
true, we must, therefore, assume that the water, in its
passage into the tank, is converted into something else,
which may be taken out of it without using any, or by
using very little, power. For example, if heat be
represented in this analogue by the water of the lake,
the oxygen and hydrogen composing the water may
illustrate other forms of energy into which the heat is
transformed in passing from hot to cold. If the process
of heat transformation were absolutely perfect, no heat
at all would arrive at the low level, since all of it
would be converted into other forms of energy.
Corresponding to this ideal case, all the water flowing
into the tank would be decomposed into oxygen and
hydrogen before reaching the bottom, and the result would
be that water would continually flow in, and yet the tank
would remain entirely empty, the gases formed escaping.
We would thus produce, by expending initially a certain
amount of work to create a sink for the heat or,
respectively, the water to flow in, a condition enabling
us to get any amount of energy without further effort.
This would be an ideal way of obtaining motive power. We
do not know of any such absolutely perfect process of
heat-conversion, and consequently some heat will
generally reach the low level, which means to say, in our
mechanical analogue, that some water will arrive at the
bottom of the tank, and a gradual and slow filling of the
latter will take place, necessitating continuous pumping
out. But evidently there will be less to pump out than
flows in, or, in other words, less energy will be needed
to maintain the initial condition than is developed by
the fall, and this is to say that some energy will be
gained from the medium. What is not converted in flowing
down can just be raised up with its own energy, and what
is converted is clear gain. Thus the virtue of the
principle I have discovered resides wholly in the
conversion of the energy on the downward flow.
FIRST EFFORTS TO PRODUCE THE SELF-ACTING ENGINE--THE
MECHANICAL OSCILLATOR--WORK OF DEWAR AND LINDE--LIQUID
AIR.
Having recognized this truth, I began to devise means for
carrying out my idea, and, after long thought, I finally
conceived a combination of apparatus which should make
possible the obtaining of power from the medium by a
process of continuous cooling of atmospheric air. This
apparatus, by continually transforming heat into
mechanical work, tended to become colder and colder, and
if it only were practicable to reach a very low
temperature in this manner, then a sink for the heat
could be produced, and energy could be derived from the
medium. This seemed to be contrary to the statements of
Carnot and Lord Kelvin before referred to, but I
concluded from the theory of the process that such a
result could be attained. This conclusion I reached, I
think, in the latter part of 1883, when I was in Paris,
and it was at a time when my mind was being more and more
dominated by an invention which I had evolved during the
preceding year, and which has since become known under
the name of the "rotating magnetic field." During the few
years which followed I elaborated further the plan I had
imagined, and studied the working conditions, but made
little headway. The commercial introduction in this
country of the invention before referred to required most
of my energies until 1889, when I again took up the idea
of the self-acting machine. A closer investigation of
the principles involved, and calculation, now showed that
the result I aimed at could not be reached in a practical
manner by ordinary machinery, as I had in the beginning
expected. This led me, as a next step, to the study of
a type of engine generally designated as "turbine," which
at first seemed to offer better chances for a realization
of the idea. Soon I found, however, that the turbine,
too, was unsuitable. But my conclusions showed that if
an engine of a peculiar kind could be brought to a high
degree of perfection, the plan I had conceived was
realizable, and I resolved to proceed with the
development of such an engine, the primary object of
which was to secure the greatest economy of
transformation of heat into mechanical energy. A
characteristic feature of the engine was that the work-performing
piston was not connected with anything else,
but was perfectly free to vibrate at an enormous rate.
The mechanical difficulties encountered in the
construction of this engine were greater than I had
anticipated, and I made slow progress. This work was
continued until early in 1892, when I went to London,
where I saw Professor Dewar's admirable experiments with
liquefied gases. Others had liquefied gases before, and
notably Ozlewski and Pictet had performed creditable
early experiments in this line, but there was such a
vigor about the work of Dewar that even the old appeared
new. His experiments showed, though in a way different
from that I had imagined, that it was possible to reach
a very low temperature by transforming heat into
mechanical work, and I returned, deeply impressed with
what I had seen, and more than ever convinced that my
plan was practicable. The work temporarily interrupted
was taken up anew, and soon I had in a fair state of
perfection the engine which I have named "the mechanical
oscillator." In this machine I succeeded in doing away
with all packings, valves, and lubrication, and in
producing so rapid a vibration of the piston that shafts
of tough steel, fastened to the same and vibrated
longitudinally, were torn asunder. By combining this
engine with a dynamo of special design I produced a
highly efficient electrical generator, invaluable in
measurements and determinations of physical quantities on
account of the unvarying rate of oscillation obtainable
by its means. I exhibited several types of this machine,
named "mechanical and electrical oscillator," before the
Electrical Congress at the World's Fair in Chicago during
the summer of 1893, in a lecture which, on account of
other pressing work, I was unable to prepare for
publication. On that occasion I exposed the principles
of the mechanical oscillator, but the original purpose of
this machine is explained here for the first time.
In the process, as I had primarily conceived it, for
the utilization of the energy of the ambient medium,
there were five essential elements in combination, and
each of these had to be newly designed and perfected, as
no such machines existed. The mechanical oscillator was
the first element of this combination, and having
perfected this, I turned to the next, which was an air-compressor of a design in certain respects resembling
that of the mechanical oscillator. Similar difficulties
in the construction were again encountered, but the work
was pushed vigorously, and at the close of 1894 I had
completed these two elements of the combination, and thus
produced an apparatus for compressing air, virtually to
any desired pressure, incomparably simpler, smaller, and
more efficient than the ordinary. I was just beginning
work on the third element, which together with the first
two would give a refrigerating machine of exceptional
efficiency and simplicity, when a misfortune befell me in
the burning of my laboratory, which crippled my labors
and delayed me. Shortly afterward Dr. Carl Linde
announced the liquefaction of air by a self-cooling
process, demonstrating that it was practicable to proceed
with the cooling until liquefaction of the air took
place. This was the only experimental proof which I was
still wanting that energy was obtainable from the medium
in the manner contemplated by me.
The liquefaction of air by a self-cooling process
was not, as popularly believed, an accidental discovery,
but a scientific result which could not have been delayed
much longer, and which, in all probability, could not
have escaped Dewar. This fascinating advance, I believe,
is largely due to the powerful work of this great
Scotchman. Nevertheless, Linde's is an immortal
achievement. The manufacture of liquid air has been
carried on for four years in Germany, on a scale much
larger than in any other country, and this strange
product has been applied for a variety of purposes. Much
was expected of it in the beginning, but so far it has
been an industrial ignis fatuus. By the use of such
machinery as I am perfecting, its cost will probably be
greatly lessened, but even then its commercial success
will be questionable. When, used as a refrigerant it is
uneconomical, as its temperature is unnecessarily low.
It is as expensive to maintain a body at a very low
temperature as it is to keep it very hot; it takes coal
to keep air cold. In oxygen manufacture it cannot yet
compete with the electrolytic method. For use as an
explosive it is unsuitable, because its low temperature
again condemns it to a small efficiency, and for motive-power purposes its cost is still by far too high. It is
of interest to note, however, that in driving an engine
by liquid air a certain amount of energy may be gained
from the engine, or, stated otherwise, from the ambient
medium which keeps the engine warm, each two hundred
pounds of iron-casting of the latter contributing energy
at the rate of about one effective horsepower during one
hour. But this gain of the consumer is offset by an
equal loss of the producer.
Much of this task on which I have labored so long
remains to be done. A number of mechanical details are
still to be perfected and some difficulties of a
different nature to be mastered, and I cannot hope to
produce a self-acting machine deriving energy from the
ambient medium for a long time yet, even if all my
expectations should materialize. Many circumstances have
occurred which have retarded my work of late, but for
several reasons the delay was beneficial.
One of these reasons was that I had ample time to
consider what the ultimate possibilities of this
development might be. I worked for a long time fully
convinced that the practical realization of this method
of obtaining energy from the sun would be of incalculable
industrial value, but the continued study of the subject
revealed the fact that while it will be commercially
profitable if my expectations are well founded, it will
not be so to an extraordinary degree.
DISCOVERY OF UNEXPECTED PROPERTIES OF THE ATMOSPHERE--STRANGE EXPERIMENTS--TRANSMISSION OF ELECTRICAL ENERGY
THROUGH ONE WIRE WITHOUT RETURN--TRANSMISSION THROUGH THE
EARTH WITHOUT ANY WIRE.
Another of these reasons was that I was led to recognize
the transmission of electrical energy to any distance
through the media as by far the best solution of the
great problem of harnessing the sun's energy for the uses
of man. For a long time I was convinced that such a
transmission on an industrial scale, could never be
realized, but a discovery which I made changed my view.
I observed that under certain conditions the atmosphere,
which is normally a high insulator, assumes conducting
properties, and so becomes capable of conveying any
amount of electrical energy. But the difficulties in the
way of a practical utilization of this discovery for the
purpose of transmitting electrical energy without wires
were seemingly insuperable. Electrical pressures of many
millions of volts had to be produced and handled;
generating apparatus of a novel kind, capable of
withstanding the immense electrical stresses, had to be
invented and perfected, and a complete safety against the
dangers of the high-tension currents had to be attained
in the system before its practical introduction could be
even thought of. All this could not be done in a few
weeks or months, or even years. The work required
patience and constant application, but the improvements
came, though slowly. Other valuable results were,
however, arrived at in the course of this long-continued
work, of which I shall endeavor to give a brief account,
enumerating the chief advances as they were successively
effected.
The discovery of the conducting properties of the
air, though unexpected, was only a natural result of
experiments in a special field which I had carried on for
some years before. It was, I believe, during 1889 that
certain possibilities offered by extremely rapid
electrical oscillations determined me to design a number
of special machines adapted for their investigation.
Owing to the peculiar requirements, the construction of
these machines was very difficult, and consumed much time
and effort; but my work on them was generously rewarded,
for I reached by their means several novel and important
results. One of the earliest observations I made with
these new machines was that electrical oscillations of an
extremely high rate act in an extraordinary manner upon
the human organism. Thus, for instance, I demonstrated
that powerful electrical discharges of several hundred
thousand volts, which at that time were considered
absolutely deadly, could be passed through the body
without inconvenience or hurtful consequences. These
oscillations produced other specific physiological
effects, which, upon my announcement, were eagerly taken
up by skilled physicians and further investigated. This
new field has proved itself fruitful beyond expectation,
and in the few years which have passed since, it has been
developed to such an extent that it now forms a
legitimate and important department of medical science.
Many results, thought impossible at that time, are now
readily obtainable with these oscillations, and many
experiments undreamed of then can now be readily
performed by their means. I still remember with pleasure
how, nine years ago, I passed the discharge of a powerful
induction-coil through my body to demonstrate before a
scientific society the comparative harmlessness of very
rapidly vibrating electric currents, and I can still
recall the astonishment of my audience. I would now
undertake, with much less apprehension that I had in that
experiment, to transmit through my body with such
currents the entire electrical energy of the dynamos now
working at Niagara--forty or fifty thousand horse-power.
I have produced electrical oscillations which were of
such intensity that when circulating through my arms and
chest they have melted wires which joined my hands, and
still I felt no inconvenience. I have energized with
such oscillations a loop of heavy copper wire so
powerfully that masses of metal, and even objects of an
electrical resistance specifically greater than that of
human tissue brought close to or placed within the loop,
were heated to a high temperature and melted, often with
the violence of an explosion, and yet into this very
space in which this terribly-destructive turmoil was
going on I have repeatedly thrust my head without feeling
anything or experiencing injurious after-effects.
Another observation was that by means of such
oscillations light could be produced in a novel and more
economical manner, which promised to lead to an ideal
system of electric illumination by vacuum-tubes,
dispensing with the necessity of renewal of lamps or
incandescent filaments, and possibly also with the use of
wires in the interior of buildings. The efficiency of
this light increases in proportion to the rate of the
oscillations, and its commercial success is, therefore,
dependent on the economical production of electrical
vibrations of transcending rates. In this direction I
have met with gratifying success of late, and the
practical introduction of this new system of illumination
is not far off.
The investigations led to many other valuable
observations and results, one of the more important of
which was the demonstration of the practicability of
supplying electrical energy through one wire without
return. At first I was able to transmit in this novel
manner only very small amounts of electrical energy, but
in this line also my efforts have been rewarded with
similar success.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 360,
Photograph XXVIII.] FIG. 3. EXPERIMENT TO ILLUSTRATE THE SUPPLYING
OF ELECTRICAL ENERGY THROUGH A SINGLE WIRE WITHOUT RETURN
An ordinary incandescent lamp, connected with one or both
of its terminals to the wire forming the upper free end of the coil shown in the
photograph, is lighted by electrical vibrations conveyed to it through the coil from
an electrical oscillator, which is worked only to one fifth of one per cent. of its
full capacity.
The photograph shown in Fig. 3 illustrates, as its title explains, an actual
transmission of this kind effected with apparatus used in
other experiments here described. To what a degree the
appliances have been perfected since my first
demonstrations early in 1891 before a scientific society,
when my apparatus was barely capable of lighting one lamp
(which result was considered wonderful), will appear when
I state that I have now no difficulty in lighting in this
manner four or five hundred lamps, and could light many
more. In fact, there is no limit to the amount of energy
which may in this way be supplied to operate any kind of
electrical device.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 354,
Photograph XXVI.]
FIG. 4. EXPERIMENT TO ILLUSTRATE THE TRANSMISSION OF
ELECTRICAL ENERGY THROUGH THE EARTH WITHOUT WIRE.
The coil shown in the photograph has its lower end
or terminal connected to the ground, and is exactly
attuned to the vibrations of a distant electrical
oscillator. The lamp lighted is in an independent wire
loop, energized by induction from the coil excited by the
electrical vibrations transmitted to it through the
ground from the oscillator, which is worked only to five
per cent. of its full capacity.
After demonstrating the practicability of this
method of transmission, the thought naturally occurred to
me to use the earth as a conductor, thus dispensing with
all wires. Whatever electricity may be, it is a fact
that it behaves like an incompressible fluid, and the
earth may be looked upon as an immense reservoir of
electricity, which, I thought, could be disturbed
effectively by a properly designed electrical machine.
Accordingly, my next efforts were directed toward
perfecting a special apparatus which would be highly
effective in creating a disturbance of electricity in the
earth. The progress in this new direction was
necessarily very slow and the work discouraging, until I
finally succeeded in perfecting a novel kind of
transformer or induction-coil, particularly suited for
this special purpose. That it is practicable, in this
manner, not only to transmit minute amounts of electrical
energy for operating delicate electrical devices, as I
contemplated at first, but also electrical energy in
appreciable quantities, will appear from an inspection of
Fig. 4, which illustrates an actual
experiment of this kind performed with the same
apparatus. The result obtained was all the more
remarkable as the top end of the coil was not connected
to a wire or plate for magnifying the effect.
"WIRELESS" TELEGRAPHY--THE SECRET OF TUNING--ERRORS IN
THE HERTZIAN INVESTIGATIONS--A RECEIVER OF WONDERFUL
SENSITIVENESS.
As the first valuable result of my experiments in this
latter line a system of telegraphy without wires
resulted, which I described in two scientific lectures in
February and March, 1893. It is mechanically illustrated
in diagram c, the upper part of which shows the
electrical arrangement as I described it then, while the
lower part illustrates its mechanical analogue. The
system is extremely simple in principle. Imagine two
tuning-forks F, F1, one at the sending- and the other at
the receiving-station respectively, each having attached
to its lower prong a minute piston p, fitting in a
cylinder. Both the cylinders communicate with a large
reservoir R, with elastic walls, which is supposed to be
closed and filled with a light and incompressible fluid.
By striking repeatedly one of the prongs of the tuning-fork F, the small piston p below would be vibrated, and
its vibrations, transmitted through the fluid, would
reach the distant fork F1, which is "tuned" to the fork
F, or, stated otherwise, of exactly the same note as the
latter. The fork F1 would now be set vibrating, and its
vibration would be intensified by the continued action of
the distant fork F until its upper prong, swinging far
out, would make an electrical connection with a
stationary contact c'', starting in this manner some
electrical or other appliances which may be used for
recording the signals. In this simple way messages could
be exchanged between the two stations, a similar contact
c' being provided for this purpose, close to the upper
prong of the fork F, so that the apparatus at each
station could be employed in turn as receiver and
transmitter.
DIAGRAM c. "WIRELESS" TELEGRAPHY MECHANICALLY ILLUSTRATED.
The electrical system illustrated in the upper
figure of diagram c is exactly the same in principle, the
two wires or circuits ESP and E1S1P1, which extend
vertically to a height, representing the two tuning-forks
with the pistons attached to them. These circuits are
connected with the ground by plates E, E1, and to two
elevated metal sheets P, P1, which store electricity and
thus magnify considerably the effect. The closed
reservoir R, with elastic walls, is in this case replaced
by the earth, and the fluid by electricity. Both of
these circuits are "tuned" and operate just like the two
tuning-forks. Instead of striking the fork F at the
sending-station, electrical oscillations are produced in
the vertical sending- or transmitting-wire ESP, as by the
action of a source S, included in this wire, which spread
through the ground and reach the distant vertical
receiving-wire E1S1P1, exciting corresponding electrical
oscillations in the same. In the latter wire or circuit
is included a sensitive device or receiver S1, which is
thus set in action and made to operate a relay or other
appliance. Each station is, of course, provided both
with a source of electrical oscillations S and a
sensitive receiver S1, and a simple provision is made for
using each of the two wires alternately to send and to
receive the messages.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 326, Photograph V.]
FIG. 5. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW OF THE COILS RESPONDING TO ELECTRICAL OSCILLATIONS.
The picture shows a number of coils , differently attuned and
responding to the vibrations transmitted to them through the earth from an electrical
oscillator. The large coil on the right, discharging strongly, is tuned to the
fundamental vibration, which is fifty thousand per second; the two larger vertical
coils to twice that number; the smaller white wire coil to four times that number, and
the remaining small coils to higher tones. The vibrations produced by the oscillator
were so intense that they affected perceptibly a small coil tuned to the twenty-sixth
higher tone.
The exact attunement of the two circuits secures
great advantages, and, in fact, it is essential in the
practical use of the system. In this respect many
popular errors exist, and, as a rule, in the technical
reports on this subject circuits and appliances are
described as affording these advantages when from their
very nature it is evident that this is impossible. In
order to attain the best results it is essential that the
length of each wire or circuit, from the ground
connection to the top, should be equal to one quarter of
the wave-length of the electrical vibration in the wire,
or else equal to that length multiplied by an odd number.
Without the observation of this rule it is virtually
impossible to prevent the interference and insure the
privacy of messages. Therein lies the secret of tuning.
To obtain the most satisfactory results it is, however,
necessary to resort to electrical vibrations of low
pitch. The Hertzian spark apparatus, used generally by
experimenters, which produces oscillations of a very high
rate, permits no effective tuning, and slight
disturbances are sufficient to render an exchange of
messages impracticable. But scientifically designed,
efficient appliances allow nearly perfect adjustment. An
experiment performed with the improved apparatus
repeatedly referred to, and intended to convey an idea of
this feature, is illustrated in Fig. 5, which is
sufficiently explained by its note.
Since I described these simple principles of
telegraphy without wires I have had frequent occasion to
note that the identical features and elements have been
used, in the evident belief that the signals are being
transmitted to considerable distance by "Hertzian"
radiations. This is only one of many misapprehensions to
which the investigations of the lamented physicist have
given rise. About thirty-three years ago Maxwell,
following up a suggestive experiment made by Faraday in
1845, evolved an ideally simple theory which intimately
connected light, radiant heat, and electrical phenomena,
interpreting them as being all due to vibrations of a
hypothetical fluid of inconceivable tenuity, called the
ether. No experimental verification was arrived at until
Hertz, at the suggestion of Helmholtz, undertook a series
of experiments to this effect. Hertz proceeded with
extraordinary ingenuity and insight, but devoted little
energy to the perfection of his old-fashioned apparatus.
The consequence was that he failed to observe the
important function which the air played in his
experiments, and which I subsequently discovered.
Repeating his experiments and reaching different results,
I ventured to point out this oversight. The strength of
the proofs brought forward by Hertz in support of
Maxwell's theory resided in the correct estimate of the
rates of vibration of the circuits he used. But I
ascertained that he could not have obtained the rates he
thought he was getting. The vibrations with identical
apparatus he employed are, as a rule, much slower, this
being due to the presence of air, which produces a
dampening effect upon a rapidly vibrating electric
circuit of high pressure, as a fluid does upon a
vibrating tuning-fork. I have, however, discovered since
that time other causes of error, and I have long ago
ceased to look upon his results as being an experimental
verification of the poetical conceptions of Maxwell. The
work of the great German physicist has acted as an
immense stimulus to contemporary electrical research, but
it has likewise, in a measure, by its fascination,
paralyzed the scientific mind, and thus hampered
independent inquiry. Every new phenomenon which was
discovered was made to fit the theory, and so very often
the truth has been unconsciously distorted.
When I advanced this system of telegraphy, my mind
was dominated by the idea of effecting communication to
any distance through the earth or environing medium, the
practical consummation of which I considered of
transcendent importance, chiefly on account of the moral
effect which it could not fail to produce universally.
As the first effort to this end I proposed at that time,
to employ relay-stations with tuned circuits, in the hope
of making thus practicable signaling over vast distances,
even with apparatus of very moderate power then at my
command. I was confident, however, that with properly
designed machinery signals could be transmitted to any
point of the globe, no matter what the distance, without
the necessity of using such intermediate stations. I
gained this conviction through the discovery of a
singular electrical phenomenon, which I described early
in 1892, in lectures I delivered before some scientific
societies abroad, and which I have called a "rotating
brush." This is a bundle of light which is formed, under
certain conditions, in a vacuum-bulb, and which is of a
sensitiveness to magnetic and electric influences
bordering, so to speak, on the supernatural. This light-bundle
is rapidly rotated by the earth's magnetism as
many as twenty thousand times pre second, the rotation in
these parts being opposite to what it would be in the
southern hemisphere, while in the region of the magnetic
equator it should not rotate at all. In its most
sensitive state, which is difficult to obtain, it is
responsive to electric or magnetic influences to an
incredible de gree. The mere stiffening of the muscles
of the arm and consequent slight electrical change in the
body of an observer standing at some distance from it,
will perceptibly affect it. When in this highly
sensitive state it is capable of indicating the slightest
magnetic and electric changes taking place in the earth.
The observation of this wonderful phenomenon impressed me
strongly that communication at any distance could be
easily effected by its means, provided that apparatus
could be perfected capable of producing an electric or
magnetic change of state, however small, in the
terrestrial globe or environing medium.
DEVELOPMENT OF A NEW PRINCIPLE--THE ELECTRICAL
OSCILLATOR--PRODUCTION OF IMMENSE ELECTRICAL MOVEMENTS--THE
EARTH RESPONDS TO MAN--INTERPLANETARY COMMUNICATION
NOW PROBABLE.
I resolved to concentrate my efforts upon this
venturesome task, though it involved great sacrifice, for
the difficulties to be mastered were such that I could
hope to consummate it only after years of labor. It
meant delay of other work to which I would have preferred
to devote myself, but I gained the conviction that my
energies could not be more usefully employed; for I
recognized that an efficient apparatus for, the
production of powerful electrical oscillations, as was
needed for that specific purpose, was the key to the
solution of other most important electrical and, in fact,
human problems. Not only was communication, to any
distance, without wires possible by its means, but,
likewise, the transmission of energy in great amounts,
the burning of the atmospheric nitrogen, the production
of an efficient illuminant, and many other results of
inestimable scientific and industrial value. Finally,
however, I had the satisfaction of accomplishing the task
undertaken by the use of a new principle, the virtue of
which is based on the marvelous properties of the
electrical condenser. One of these is that it can
discharge or explode its stored energy in an
inconceivably short time. Owing to this it is unequaled
in explosive violence. The explosion of dynamite is only
the breath of a consumptive compared with its discharge.
It is the means of producing the strongest current, the
highest electrical pressure, the greatest commotion in
the medium. Another of its properties, equally valuable,
is that its discharge may vibrate at any rate desired up
to many millions per second.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 324, Photograph III.]
FIG. 6. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW OF THE ESSENTIAL PARTS OF THE
ELECTRICAL OSCILLATOR USED IN THE EXPERIMENTS DESCRIBED
I had arrived at the limit of rates obtainable in
other ways when the happy idea presented itself to me to
resort to the condenser. I arranged such an instrument
so as to be charged and discharged alternately in rapid
succession through a coil with a few turns of stout wire,
forming the primary of a transformer or induction-coil.
Each time the condenser was discharged the current would
quiver in the primary wire and induce corresponding
oscillations in the secondary. Thus a transformer or
induction-coil on new principles was evolved, which I
have called "the electrical oscillator," partaking of
those unique qualities which characterize the condenser,
and enabling results to be attained impossible by other
means. Electrical effects of any desired character and
of intensities undreamed of before are now easily
producible by perfected apparatus of this kind, to which
frequent reference has been made, and the essential parts
of which are shown in Fig. 6. For certain
purposes a strong inductive effect is required; for
others the greatest possible suddenness; for others
again, an exceptionally high rate of vibration or extreme
pressure; while for certain other objects immense
electrical movements are necessary. The photographs in
Figs. 7, 8, 9, and 10, of experiments performed with such
an oscillator, may serve to illustrate some of these
features and convey an idea of the magnitude of the
effects actually produced. The completeness of the
titles of the figures referred to makes a further
description of them unnecessary.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 344,
Photograph XVII.]
FIG. 7. EXPERIMENT TO ILLUSTRATE AN INDUCTIVE EFFECT OF
AN ELECTRICAL OSCILLATOR OF GREAT POWER.
The photograph shows three ordinary incandescent
lamps lighted to full candle-power by currents induced in
a local loop consisting of a single wire forming a square
of fifty feet each side, which includes the lamps, and
which is at a distance of one hundred feet from the
primary circuit energized by the oscillator. The loop
likewise includes an electrical condenser, and is exactly
attuned to the vibrations of the oscillator, which is
worked at less than five percent of its total capacity.
[See
Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs Notes, page 335,
Photograph XI.]
FIG. 8. EXPERIMENT TO ILLUSTRATE THE CAPACITY OF THE
OSCILLATOR FOR PRODUCING ELECTRICAL EXPLOSIONS OF GREAT
POWER.
Note to Fig. 8.--The coil, partly shown in the
photograph, creates an alternative movement of electricity from the earth into a
large reservoir and back at a rate of one hundred thousand alternations per
second. The adjustments are such that the reservoir is fulled full and bursts at
each alternation just at the moment when the electrical pressure reaches the
maximum. The discharge escapes with a deafening noise, striking an unconnected
coil twenty-two feet away, and creating such a commotion of electricity in the
earth that sparks an inch long can be drawn from a water main at a distance of
three hundred feet from the laboratory.
[See Nikola Tesla: Colorado Springs
Notes, page 390, Photograph LXII.]
FIG. 9. EXPERIMENT TO ILLUSTRATE THE CAPACITY ON THE
OSCILLATOR FOR CREATING A GREAT ELECTRICAL MOVEMENT.
The ball shown in the photograph, covered with a
polished metallic coating of twenty square feet of
surface, represents a large reservoir of electricity, and
the inverted tin pan underneath, with a sharp rim, a big
opening through which the electricity can escape before
filling the reservoir. The quantity of electricity set
in movement is so great that, although most of it escapes
through the rim of the pan or opening provided, the ball
or reservoir is nevertheless alternately emptied and
filled to over-flowing (as is evident from the discharge
escaping on the top of the ball) one hundred and fifty
thousand times per second.
[See Nikola Tesla:
Colorado Springs Notes, page 332, Photograph IX.]
FIG. 10. PHOTOGRAPHIC VIEW OF AN EXPERIMENT TO
ILLUSTRATE AN EFFECT OF AN ELECTRICAL OSCILLATOR
DELIVERING ENERGY AT A RATE OF SEVENTY-FIVE THOUSAND
HORSE-POWER.
The discharge, creating a strong draft owing to the
heating of the air, is carried upward through the open
roof of the building. The greatest width across is
nearly seventy feet. The pressure is over twelve million
volts, and the current alternates one hundred and thirty
thousand times per second.
However extraordinary the results shown may appear,
they are but trifling compared with those which are
attainable by apparatus designed on these same
principles. I have produced electrical discharges the
actual path of which, from end to end, was probably more
than one hundred feet long; but it would not be difficult
to reach lengths one hundred times as great. I have
produced electrical movements occurring at the rate of
approximately one hundred thousand horse-power, but rates
of one, five, or ten million horse-power are easily
practicable. In these experiments effects were developed
incomparably greater than any ever produced by human
agencies, and yet these results are but an embryo of what
is to be.
That communication without wires to any point of the
globe is practicable with such apparatus would need no
demonstration, but through a discovery which I made I
obtained absolute certitude. Popularly explained, it is
exactly this: When we raise the voice and hear an echo in
reply, we know that the sound of the voice must have
reached a distant wall, or boundary, and must have been
reflected from the same. Exactly as the sound, so an
electrical wave is reflected, and the same evidence which
is afforded by an echo is offered by an electrical
phenomenon known as a "stationary" wave--that is, a wave
with fixed nodal and ventral regions. Instead of sending
sound-vibrations toward a distant wall, I have sent
electrical vibrations toward the remote boundaries of the
earth, and instead of the wall the earth has replied. In
place of an echo I have obtained a stationary electrical
wave, a wave reflected from afar.
Stationary waves in the earth mean something more
than mere telegraphy without wires to any distance. They
will enable us to attain many important specific results
impossible otherwise. For instance, by their use we may
produce at will, from a sending-station, an electrical
effect in any particular region of the globe; we may
determine the relative position or course of a moving
object, such as a vessel at sea, the distance traversed
by the same, or its speed; or we may send over the earth
a wave of electricity traveling at any rate we desire,
from the pace of a turtle up to lightning speed.
With these developments we have every reason to
anticipate that in a time not very distant most
telegraphic messages across the oceans will be
transmitted without cables. For short distances we need
a "wireless" telephone, which requires no expert
operators. The greater the spaces to be bridged, the
more rational becomes communication without wires. The
cable is not only an easily damaged and costly
instrument, but it limits us in the speed of transmission
by reason of a certain electrical property inseparable
from its construction. A properly designed plant for
effecting communication without wires ought to have many
times the working capacity of a cable, while it will
involve incomparably less expense. Not a long time will
pass, I believe, before communication by cable will
become obsolete, for not only will signaling by this new
method be quicker and cheaper, but also much safer. By
using some new means for isolating the messages which I
have contrived, an almost perfect privacy can be secured.
I have observed the above effects so far only up to
a limited distance of about six hundred miles, but
inasmuch as there is virtually no limit to the power of
the vibrations producible with such an oscillator, I feel
quite confident of the success of such a plant for
effecting transoceanic communication. Nor is this all.
My measurements and calculations have shown that it is
perfectly practicable to produce on our globe, by the use
of these principles, an electrical movement of such
magnitude that, without the slightest doubt, its effect
will be perceptible on some of our nearer planets, as
Venus and Mars. Thus from mere possibility
interplanetary communication has entered the stage of
probability. In fact, that we can produce a distinct
effect on one of these planets in this novel manner,
namely, by disturbing the electrical condition of the
earth, is beyond any doubt. This way of effecting such
communication is, however, essentially different from all
others which have so far been proposed by scientific men.
In all the previous instances only a minute fraction of
the total energy reaching the planet--as much as it would
be possible to concentrate in a reflector--could be
utilized by the supposed observer in his instrument. But
by the means I have developed he would be enabled to
concentrate the larger portion of the entire energy
transmitted to the planet in his instrument, and the
chances of affecting the latter are thereby increased
many millionfold.
Besides machinery for producing vibrations of the
required power, we must have delicate means capable of
revealing the effects of feeble influences exerted upon
the earth. For such purposes, too, I have perfected new
methods. By their use we shall likewise be able, among
other things, to detect at considerable distance the
presence of an iceberg or other object at sea. By their
use, also, I have discovered some terrestrial phenomena
still unexplained. That we can send a message to a
planet is certain, that we can get an answer is probable:
man is not the only being in the Infinite gifted with a
mind.
TRANSMISSION OF ELECTRICAL ENERGY TO ANY DISTANCE WITHOUT
WIRES--NOW PRACTICABLE--THE BEST MEANS OF INCREASING THE
FORCE ACCELERATING THE HUMAN MASS.
The most valuable observation made in the course of these
investigations was the extraordinary behavior of the
atmosphere toward electric impulses of excessive
electromotive force. The experiments showed that the air
at the ordinary pressure became distinctly conducting,
and this opened up the wonderful prospect of transmitting
large amounts of electrical energy for industrial
purposes to great distances without wires, a possibility
which, up to that time, was thought of only as a
scientific dream. Further investigation revealed the
important fact that the conductivity imparted to the air
by these electrical impulses of many millions of volts
increased very rapidly with the degree of rarefaction, so
that air strata at very moderate altitudes, which are
easily accessible, offer, to all experimental evidence,
a perfect conducting path, better than a copper wire, for
currents of this character.
Thus the discovery of these new properties of the
atmosphere not only opened up the possibility of
transmitting, without wires, energy in large amounts,
but, what was still more significant, it afforded the
certitude that energy could be transmitted in this manner
economically. In this new system it matters little--in
fact, almost nothing--whether the transmission is
effected at a distance of a few miles or of a few
thousand miles.
While I have not, as yet, actually effected a
transmission of a considerable amount of energy, such as
would be of industrial importance, to a great distance by
this new method, I have operated several model plants
under exactly the same conditions which will exist in a
large plant of this kind, and the practicability of the
system is thoroughly demonstrated. The experiments have
shown conclusively that, with two terminals maintained at
an elevation of not more than thirty thousand to thirty-five
thousand feet above sea-level, and with an
electrical pressure of fifteen to twenty million volts,
the energy of thousands of horse-power can be transmitted
over distances which may be hundreds and, if necessary,
thousands of miles. I am hopeful, however, that I may be
able to reduce very considerably the elevation of the
terminals now required, and with this object I am
following up an idea which promises such a realization.
There is, of course, a popular prejudice against using an
electrical pressure of millions of volts, which may cause
sparks to fly at distances of hundreds of feet, but,
paradoxical as it may seem, the system, as I have
described it in a technical publication, offers greater
personal safety than most of the ordinary distribution
circuits now used in the cities. This is, in a measure,
borne out by the fact that, although I have carried on
such experiments for a number of years, no injury has
been sustained either by me or any of my assistants.
But to enable a practical introduction of the
system, a number of essential requirements are still to
be fulfilled. It is not enough to develop appliances by
means of which such a transmission can be effected. The
machinery must be such as to allow the transformation and
transmission, of electrical energy under highly economic
and practical conditions. Furthermore, an inducement
must be offered to those who are engaged in the
industrial exploitation of natural sources of power, as
waterfalls, by guaranteeing greater returns on the
capital invested than they can secure by local
development of the property.
From that moment when it was observed that, contrary
to the established opinion, low and easily accessible
strata of the atmosphere are capable of conducting
electricity, the transmission of electrical energy
without wires has become a rational task of the engineer,
and one surpassing all others in importance. Its
practical consummation would mean that energy would be
available for the uses of man at any point of the globe,
not in small amounts such as might be derived from the
ambient medium by suitable machinery, but in quantities
virtually unlimited, from waterfalls. Export of power
would then become the chief source of income for many
happily situated countries, as the United States, Canada,
Central and South America, Switzerland, and Sweden. Men
could settle down everywhere, fertilize and irrigate the
soil with little effort, and convert barren deserts into
gardens, and thus the entire globe could be transformed
and made a fitter abode for mankind. It is highly
probable that if there are intelligent beings on Mars
they have long ago realized this very idea, which would
explain the changes on its surface noted by astronomers.
The atmosphere on that planet, being of considerably
smaller density than that of the earth, would make the
task much more easy.
It is probable that we shall soon have a self-acting
heat-engine capable of deriving moderate amounts of
energy from the ambient medium. There is also a
possibility--though a small one--that we may obtain
electrical energy direct from the sun. This might be the
case if the Maxwellian theory is true, according to which
electrical vibrations of all rates should emanate from
the sun. I am still investigating this subject. Sir
William Crookes has shown in his beautiful invention
known as the "radiometer" that rays may produce by impact
a mechanical effect, and this may lead to some important
revelation as to the utilization of the sun's rays in
novel ways. Other sources of energy may be opened up,
and new methods of deriving energy from the sun
discovered, but none of these or similar achievements
would equal in importance the transmission of power to
any distance through the medium. I can conceive of no
technical advance which would tend to unite the various
elements of humanity more effectively than this one, or
of one which would more add to and more economize human
energy. It would be the best means of increasing the
force accelerating the human mass. The mere moral
influence of such a radical departure would be
incalculable. On the other hand if at any point of the
globe energy can be obtained in limited quantities from
the ambient medium by means of a self-acting heat-engine
or otherwise, the conditions will remain the same as
before. Human performance will be increased, but men
will remain strangers as they were.
I anticipate that any, unprepared for these results,
which, through long familiarity, appear to me simple and
obvious, will consider them still far from practical
application. Such reserve, and even opposition, of some
is as useful a quality and as necessary an element in
human progress as the quick receptivity and enthusiasm of
others. Thus, a mass which resists the force at first,
once set in movement, adds to the energy. The scientific
man does not aim at an immediate result. He does not
expect that his advanced ideas will be readily taken up.
His work is like that of the planter--for the future.
His duty is to lay the foundation for those who are to
come, and point the way. He lives and labors and hopes
with the poet who says:
Schaff' das Tagwerk meiner Hände,
Hohes Glück, dass ich's vollende!
Lass, o lass mich nicht ermatten!
Nein, es sind nicht leere Träume:
Jetzt nur Stangen, diese Bäume
Geben einst noch Frucht und Schatten. [1]
1 Daily work--my hands' employment,
To complete is pure enjoyment!
Let, oh, let me never falter!
No! there is no empty dreaming:
Lo! these trees, but bare poles seeming,
Yet will yield both food and shelter!
Goethe's "Hope"
Translated by William Gibson, Com. U. S. N.
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