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Ernst Alexanderson

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Ernst Frederik Werner Alexanderson

(born Jan. 25, 1878, Uppsala, Swed. — died May 14, 1975, Schenectady, N.Y., U.S.) Swedish-born U.S. electrical engineer and television pioneer. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1901 and spent most of the next five decades at General Electric; from 1952 he worked for RCA. He developed a high-frequency alternator that was capable of producing continuous radio waves, revolutionizing radio communication. His completed alternator (1906) greatly improved transoceanic communication and firmly established the use of wireless devices in shipping and warfare. He also developed a sophisticated control system (1916) used to automate intricate manufacturing processes and operate antiaircraft guns. He was awarded his 321st patent in 1955 for the colour TV receiver he developed for RCA.

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Dictionary: Al·ex·an·der·son   (ăl'ĭg-zăn'dər-sən) pronunciation, Ernst Frederick Werner
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1878-1975.

Swedish-born American electrical engineer and inventor who demonstrated the first practical television system (1930).


Wikipedia: Ernst Alexanderson
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Ernst Frederick Werner Alexanderson
Born January 25, 1878(1878-01-25)
Uppsala, Sweden
Died May 14, 1975 (aged 97)
Schenectady, New York
Residence United States
Nationality Swedish
Fields Electrical engineering
Notable awards IEEE Medal of Honor

Ernst Frederick Werner Alexanderson (Uppsala, Sweden, January 25, 1878 – May 14, 1975) was a Swedish-American electrical engineer, who was a pioneer in radio and television development.

Contents

Background

Alexanderson was educated at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm and the Technische Hochschule (Technical University) in Berlin, Germany. He emigrated to the U.S. in 1902 and spent much of his life working for the General Electric company. He designed the Alexanderson alternator, a high-frequency generator for longwave transmissions, which made modulated (voice) radio broadcasts practical. The only surviving transmitter in a working state is at the Grimeton radio station outside Varberg, Sweden. It is a prime example of pre-electronic radio technology and was added to UNESCO's World heritage list in 2004.

He had been employed at General Electric for only a short period of time when GE received an order from Canadian-born professor and researcher Reginald Fessenden for an alternator with much higher frequency than others in existence at that time. In the summer of 1906 Mr. Alexanderson presented a 50 kHz alternator that was installed in Fessenden's radio station in Brant Rock, Massachusetts. By fall its output had been improved to 500 watts and 75 kHz. On Christmas Eve, 1906, Fessenden broadcast the first radio transmission with music and talk, playing the violin and reading the gospel himself. The transmission was heard as far away as the Caribbean Sea.

Alexanderson also created the amplidyne, a direct current amplifier.

Mr. Alexanderson was also instrumental in the development of television. The first television broadcast in the United States was to his GE Plot home at 1132 Adams Rd, Schenectady, NY, in 1927. Over his lifetime, Mr. Alexanderson received 345 US patents, the last filed in 1968 at age 89. The inventor and engineer remained active to an advanced age, working as a consultant to GE and RCA in the 1950s. He died in 1975 and was buried at Vale Cemetery in Schenectady, New York.

Legacy

In 1983, he was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame and in 2002 the Consumer Electronics Hall of Fame.

Patents

See also

References

  • David E. Fisher and Marshall J. Fisher, Tube, the Invention of Television Counterpoint, Washington D.C. USA, (1996) ISBN 1-887178-17-1
  • E.F.W. Alexanderson. General Electric Review, January, 1913
  • E.F.W. Alexanderson, "Transatlantic Radio Communication", Trans. AIEE, (1919), pp. 1077-1093
  • J.E. Brittain, Electrical Engineering Hall of Fame: Ernst F. W. Alexanderson, Proc. of the IEEE, Volume 92, July 2004, pp. 1216 - 1219.

External links


 
 
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radio (mechanical device – in electronics)
Year 1907 (in Science & Technology)
Otto B. Blackwell

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