Guglielmo Marconi (and. 1874- T.1937), a magnetic-wave scientist and radio inventor, born in Bologna, Italy, from a wealthy family,
Marconi succeeded in inventing a private device and went to England, showed the device and its record there, and established a company, the first man to successfully send and receive radiation signals on various distances.
In 1901, he sent signals across the Atlantic, and it was a great day in the history of radio communications, where struggling warships could quickly ask for help, and in the last years of his life, he developed the use of short waves and very short waves, and Marconi died in Rome.
His life.
Marconi was born in the Italian city of Bologna in 1874, from a wealthy family.
His life.
Marconi was born in the Italian city of Bologna in 1874, from a wealthy family.
And he learned in his house, and when he was 20, he read Heinrich Hertz's experiments that he did years earlier, and Hertz's experiments proved that there were invisible electromagnetic waves, which move in the air at the speed of light.
And Marconi believed that these waves could be used to send sound signals to long distances without wires.
This makes it easier to communicate than to use telegraph. Through these waves, they can send messages to ships in the ocean.
In 1895, after one year of hard work, Marconi succeeded in inventing a special device, and in 1896 he went to England and recorded it there.
In 1895, after one year of hard work, Marconi succeeded in inventing a special device, and in 1896 he went to England and recorded it there.
He quickly set up a company. In 1898, he sent the signal that he called Marconi Gram, and in the third year he was able to send radio messages through the English Channel. Marconi went on to make improvements to his equipment and made it happen first.
The importance of his invention.
The importance of his invention.
The importance of this invention was starkly apparent in 1909 when the Bellwether sank and radio messages could save a number of passengers.
They were used to asking for help from nearby ships. In the same year, Marconi won the Nobel Prize, and the following year he succeeded in sending radio messages between Ireland and Argentina, a distance of 6,000 miles (ca. 9,656 km).
And these messages all moved in the way that any dot and police were, and Marconi thought that voice could also be transmitted over these enormous distances.
But that was only 1915. The world knew radio on a large scale only in 1920.
His Last Years.
His Last Years.
And in the last years of his life, he photographed short waves and very short waves and Marconi died in Rome in 1937. He got the Nobel Prize in Physics.
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