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  1. 1 juil. 2024 · Guglielmo Marconi was an Italian physicist and inventor of a successful wireless telegraph, or radio (1896). In 1909 he received the Nobel Prize for Physics, which he shared with German...

  2. 2 juil. 2024 · Guglielmo Marconi, an Italian inventor, is often credited with the invention of radio. In 1895, Marconi developed a wireless telegraphy system that could transmit signals over long distances using electromagnetic waves. By 1899, he successfully transmitted signals across the English Channel, and in 1901, he achieved the first transatlantic ...

  3. 29 juin 2024 · Guglielmo Marconi produced the first Hertzian wave receiving apparatus in 1896. There is a historical controversy regarding the creator of radio. On the one hand, the famous Serbian inventor Nikola Tesla filed the first patent for a Hertzian wave receiver.

  4. Il y a 6 jours · This same "staying power" was also a key part of the journey that Guglielmo Marconi (photo below) took in developing radio. Prior to 1895, Marconi had been unable to get his transmissions to go further than 1/2 mile.

  5. Il y a 4 jours · In 1895, Marconi began experimenting with the transmission of radio waves. He was interested in the possibility of using wireless telegraphy to transmit messages over long distances without the need for wires. Marconi conducted a series of experiments using a device called a coherer, which consisted of a glass tube filled with a mixture of ...

  6. Il y a 1 jour · Among his many experiments, Marconi invented the first radio that could broadcast beyond line-of-sight in 1895. After receiving the first patent for his “wireless telegraph” in England, Marconi established the London-based “Wireless Telegraph and Signal Company,” later the Marconi Company.

  7. Il y a 3 jours · In the early days of radio, the thus-named Marconi antenna (monopole) and the doublet (dipole) were seen as distinct inventions. Now, however, the "monopole" antenna is understood as a special case of a dipole which has a virtual element "underground".