There are people who were accounted with him so swore so.
Tesla's work on particle beam weapons can be traced all the way back to 1893 with his invention of a button lamp.
Nikola Tesla's Death Ray experiment was a system for the acceleration of very small charged metallic particles to prodigiously high velocity, it would be forty-eight times the speed of sound. The Death Ray experiment is mentioned in the Nikola Tesla's book called Tesla: Man Out of Time.
Nikola Tesla theorized about a directed energy weapon that he called a "teleforce" or "death ray," but there is no evidence that he successfully developed or tested such a device. It remains a concept rather than a realized invention.
There are claims that Nikola Tesla experimented with a concept he called a "death ray," which was meant to be a form of defensive weapon. However, there is no concrete evidence that he successfully created such a weapon or that it was ever used as intended. Tesla's work in this area remains a subject of controversy and speculation.
The Electrical Review in 1896 published X-rays of a man, made by Tesla, with X-ray tubes of his own design. They appeared at the same time as when Roentgen announced his discovery of X-rays. Tesla never attempted to proclaim priority. Roentgen congratulated Tesla on his sophisticated X-ray pictures, and Tesla even wrote Roentgen's name on one of his films. He experimented with shadowgraphs similar to those that later were to be used by Wilhelm Rontgen when he discovered X-rays in 1895. Tesla's countless experiments included work on a carbon button lamp, on the power of electrical resonance, and on various types of lightning. Tesla invented the special vacuum tube which emitted light to be used in photography.
Nikola Tesla was the inventer of the death ray
Tesla's work on particle beam weapons can be traced all the way back to 1893 with his invention of a button lamp.
Nikola Tesla's Death Ray experiment was a system for the acceleration of very small charged metallic particles to prodigiously high velocity, it would be forty-eight times the speed of sound. The Death Ray experiment is mentioned in the Nikola Tesla's book called Tesla: Man Out of Time.
Nikola Tesla theorized about a directed energy weapon that he called a "teleforce" or "death ray," but there is no evidence that he successfully developed or tested such a device. It remains a concept rather than a realized invention.
There are claims that Nikola Tesla experimented with a concept he called a "death ray," which was meant to be a form of defensive weapon. However, there is no concrete evidence that he successfully created such a weapon or that it was ever used as intended. Tesla's work in this area remains a subject of controversy and speculation.
Tesla coil Tesla turbine Teleforce Tesla's oscillator Tesla electric car Tesla principle Tesla's Egg of Columbus Alternating current Induction motor Rotating magnetic field Wireless technology Particle beam weapon Death ray Terrestrial stationary waves Bifilar coil Telegeodynamics Electrogravitics
He did so. After that he covered the writings and drawing of the weapon after the The Tunguska event. He wanted no more with it.
This would make for a good story but in fact Tesla was founded by Martin Eberhard in 2003. Way after Nicolas Teslas death
This is what he's known for: Tesla coil Tesla turbine Teleforce Tesla's oscillator Tesla electric car Tesla principle Tesla's Egg of Columbus Alternating current Induction motor Rotating magnetic field Wireless technology Particle beam weapon Death ray Terrestrial stationary waves Bifilar coil Telegeodynamics Electrogravitics !
Tesla could imaging things in his mind and put them to work.
The Electrical Review in 1896 published X-rays of a man, made by Tesla, with X-ray tubes of his own design. They appeared at the same time as when Roentgen announced his discovery of X-rays. Tesla never attempted to proclaim priority. Roentgen congratulated Tesla on his sophisticated X-ray pictures, and Tesla even wrote Roentgen's name on one of his films. He experimented with shadowgraphs similar to those that later were to be used by Wilhelm Rontgen when he discovered X-rays in 1895. Tesla's countless experiments included work on a carbon button lamp, on the power of electrical resonance, and on various types of lightning. Tesla invented the special vacuum tube which emitted light to be used in photography.
Nikola Tesla - 10 July 1856 - 7 January 1943.