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Edison, Thomas Alva

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Edison, Thomas Alva (1847–1931)

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The first electric light bulb, invented by Thomas Edison, had carbonized thread as its filament, and burned for 45 hours. Edison experimented with many other filaments, including red hair and a mixture of lamp black and tar.
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An advertisement for Thomas Edison's photo-play of Zeb's Musical Career. The photograph from the play shows a young man playing the trombone in front of a group of people (1913). In 1887, Edison invented a motion picture camera, which was patented as the Kinetograph in 1893; the early films he produced were set in a studio and usually featured comedic or musical acts.
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US inventor Thomas Edison, who became known internationally after his invention of the phonograph (pictured). His original instrument used a cylinder coated with tinfoil to record sounds and was patented in 1878. Edison did not initially think of using the machine to record music for pleasure but as an office dictating machine.

US scientist and inventor, whose work in the fields of communications and electrical power greatly influenced the world in which we live. With more than 1,000 patents, Edison produced his most important inventions in Menlo Park, New Jersey 1876–87, including the phonograph. He obtained a US patent for the electric light bulb in 1879. He also constructed a system of electric power distribution for consumers, the telephone transmitter, and the megaphone.

Telegraphy and telephony

Edison's first success came in the area of telegraphy. Perceiving the need for rapid communications after the Civil War, his first invention was an automatic repeater for telegraphic messages. He then invented a tape machine called a ‘ticker’, which communicated stock exchange prices across the country.

Turning his attention to the transmission of the human voice over long distances in 1876, he patented an electric transmitter system that proved to be less commercially successful than the telephone of Bell and Gray, patented a few months later. Undeterred, Edison set about improving their system, culminating in his invention of the carbon transmitter, which so increased the volume of the telephone signal that it was used as a microphone in the Bell telephone.

The light bulb

While experimenting with the carbon microphone in the 1870s, Edison had toyed briefly with the idea of using a thin carbon filament as a light source in an incandescent electric lamp. He returned to the idea in 1879. His first major success came on 19 October of that year when, using carbonized sewing cotton mounted on an electrode in a vacuum (one millionth of an atmosphere), he obtained a source that remained aglow for 45 hours without overheating – a major problem with all other materials used. He and his assistants tried 6,000 other organic materials before finding a bamboo fibre that gave a bulb life of 1,000 hours. In 1878 English physicist Joseph Swan had also developed an electric lamp, and after a legal wrangle the joint company Edison and Swan United Electric Light Company came into being in 1883.

Generators and the first power stations

To produce a serious rival to gas illumination, a power source was required as well as a cheap and reliable lamp. The alternatives were either generators or heavy and expensive batteries. At that time, the best generators rarely converted more than 40% of the mechanical energy into electrical energy. Edison's first generator consisted of a drum armature of soft iron wire and a simple bi-polar magnet, and was designed to operate one arc lamp and some incandescent lamps in series.

A few months later he built a much more ambitious generator, the largest built to date, weighing 500 kg/1,103 lb and with an efficiency of 82%. Edison's team were at the forefront of development in generator technology over the next decade, during which efficiency was raised above 90%. To complete his electrical system he designed cables to carry power into the home from small (by modern standards) generating stations, and also invented an electricity meter to record its use.

The phonograph

In 1877 he began the era of recorded sound by inventing the phonograph, a device in which the vibrations of the human voice were engraved by a needle on a revolving cylinder coated with tin foil.

Edison was born in Milan, Ohio, and was self-educated. He began work at the age of 12 as a newsboy, and later printed the The Grand Trunk Herald, the first newspaper issued from a railway train. As a 19-year-old telegraph operator, he took out his first patent, for an electric vote recorder. With the proceeds of an improved stock ticker (a machine that printed stock-market prices on continuous paper tape), he opened an industrial research laboratory in Newark, New Jersey, 1869, later moving to Menlo Park and then to West Orange. In 1889, he formed the Edison Light Company, which became the General Electric Company.

Other inventions include a new type of storage battery and the kinetoscopic camera, an early cine camera. He also anticipated the Fleming thermionic valve. He supported direct current (DC) transmission, but alternating current (AC) was eventually found to be more efficient and economical.



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