Nikola Tesla - Case Files
Nikola Tesla - Case Files
Nikola Tesla - Case Files
Introduction
Born in a rural village in Croatia, Nikola Tesla would bring his brilliant scientific mind to America in 1884 to
work with Thomas Edison. It was George Westinghouse, however, who fully recognized Tesla's brilliance and
initiated a partnership with him. During that temporary partnership with Westinghouse and for many years that
followed, Tesla generated amazing new advances in electrical engineering and earned patents by the dozen.
Who was Nikola Tesla? What were his contributions to research in high frequency phenomena?
Brilliant Imaginings
Nikola Tesla was born on July 9, 1856, in Smiljan, a village in rural Croatia, then part of the Austro-Hungarian
empire. He was the son of a Serbian Orthodox priest who was a notable preacher, and a clever and inventive,
though uneducated, mother. Tesla was the second son in a family of two boys and three girls. His brilliant 12-
year-old brother, Dane, died from an accident when Nikola was five years old.
Tesla grew up a keenly imaginative child, becoming fluent in six languages and developing a fascination for
mechanical contraptions. A science prodigy, he was destined for the family occupations of priesthood or the
military, but he was able, during a childhood illness, to get permission to pursue his dreams in science. He
described his adventurous imaginings to be much more than dreams; instead, they were highly detailed
Between the age of 10 and 14, Tesla attended school in the town of Gospic, graduating as a brilliant student
who had taught himself as much outside the classroom as he had learned inside. During the next three years at
college in Carlstadt, Tesla discovered his lifetime passion: the science of electricity. His announcement of this
choice was resisted by his parents, but decisions delayed when Tesla succumbed to the cholera epidemic in his
hometown. He was dangerously ill and restricted for a year, and when he recovered, his father permitted his
Planting Seeds
In 1875, Tesla began studying electrical engineering at the Polytechnic Institute in Graz, Austria. Again, with
obsessive effort that permitted only study, he excelled. In Graz, Tesla was able to observe the new Gramme
machine, which generated direct current electricity using electromagnets and could also be reversed to operate
as an electricity-driven motor. The demonstration planted an intuitive seed in Tesla's brain. Why was it
necessary to go to such lengths to convert the alternating current (AC) produced by the dynamo to direct
current (DC)? Why not leave the current AC and run the motor that way?
The electrical standard at that time was DC, the same mode produced by a battery, the mode that everyone was
used to and accepted. To even imagine usable alternating current was visionary. Tesla's strong instincts told
him this was possible, but at that time, in spite of his visualization efforts and the mental gymnastics of
picturing many operating dynamo models, he failed to find the solution to this nagging problem.
position with the newly-established Hungarian Telegraph Office in Budapest. Recognition of his ability came
quickly and, in 1881, he was made manager of the telephone company and, with his characteristic enthusiasm,
worked, invented, and began his avalanche of discoveries. However, his fixation with the alternating motor
idea remained and eventually manifested in a critical mental and physical breakdown with highly mysterious
symptoms. A hypersensitivity to sounds, light, and vibration brought shivers, twitches, and wildly erratic pulse
rates. The illness continued for some months and defied medical diagnosis. Physical improvement came, the
extreme sensitivity subsided, and Tesla returned to work still maintaining his captivation with the AC motor
puzzle.
The puzzle's solution came to him in dramatic fashion in February, 1882. While walking with a friend at
sunset, reciting poetry by Goethe, a spasm of revelation struck Tesla. He stood transfixed, explaining how an
AC motor would work. The vision he outlined in minute detail had surfaced spontaneously in response to the
questions he had asked himself back in 1875. Tesla later described his visualization powers with the example
that he would envisage a design in meticulous detail, then return to the retained image days or weeks later and
be able to examine it for wear as if it had been running during the intervening period.
In the midst of this excitement, Tesla's employer sold the telephone company but encouraged this unusual
genius to move to Paris for work and expanded opportunities. Tesla moved to Paris in April of 1882.
Interested in learning more about Nikola Tesla? Learn More About His Cresson Award
Dreams to Reality
In Paris, Tesla was referred to a junior engineer position with the Compagnie Continental Edison, the branch
of the American company set up to expand Edison’s DC generators and lighting systems. Advancing quickly,
Tesla became one of the traveling repairmen sent to work on installations throughout Europe. He continued to
be a strange, phobic character and talk enthusiastically about his AC system. He received little attention from
colleagues who were too busy expanding the DC system. The company had stunned the public by illuminating
the 1881 Paris Electrical Exhibition and was setting up generators to light-restricted areas such as factories.
However, the one-mile transmission range for practical DC transmission limited sales to larger installations
The German city of Strasburg did purchase an Edison system, but the dedication ceremony for the railroad
station lighting was disastrous. Throwing the switch caused an immediate explosion which blew out a wall of
the train shed. The German-speaking Tesla was dispatched to deal with the problem. He spent a year doing the
repairs and waiting for various levels of bureaucracy to approve the work.
During the slow time of waiting, Tesla was able to convert his dreams to reality. In a rented machine shop, he
built the solid version of the dynamo he had preserved in his mind's eye during the previous year. The model
worked beautifully. On returning to Paris, Tesla's plan was to collect his Strasburg bonus for start-up funds and
find French financial backers as he built his new AC generators and motors.
The bonus did not materialize, either through lack of funds on the Edison company's part or misplaced
expectations on Tesla's part. Edison managers advised Tesla to take his dreams and plans and try them out in
America. The 28-year-old who had studied, worked, and traveled through much of central Europe set out for
Coming to America
Nikola Tesla arrived in New York on June 6, 1884, and set out to look for the friend he would live with. He
stopped to do an engine repair job he happened to find along the way, and met with Thomas Edison, a meeting
Working for Edison, Tesla again advanced quickly and his many patentable designs improved efficiency and
controls. Tesla again became convinced that Edison had not lived up to a promise of bonuses and he resigned
cherished AC generators and motors. The Tesla Light and Manufacturing Company was established and began
to produce AC-driven arc lighting. Following completion of the project that illuminated the city of Rahway,
New Jersey, Tesla expected to go on to manufacture his generators but his naivety brought failure. In the fall of
1886, the backers disagreed with Tesla, tricked him out of his money and patents, and left him penniless.
In the next step of his eventful life, Tesla spent the winter of 1886 working as a ditch digger and no doubt
telling everyone he met of his AC electricity systems. A foreman recognized his promising labor and
Recognized Genius
In April of 1887, the Tesla Electric Company was born in southern Manhattan and Tesla finally had the
opportunity to build—in reality—the entire electrical systems, from generators through transformers to motors,
that had been in his visual memory since that day in Budapest.
When he applied for the patent on his invention, he was directed by the patent office to rework and resubmit it
broken into seven separate sections to reflect the inventive scope of the work. U.S. patents numbered 381,968
through 381,970 and 382,279 through 382,282 were issued on May 1, 1888.
The engineering fraternity began to notice Tesla and he was persuaded to address the American Institute of
Electrical Engineers on May 16, 1888. Tesla's description of the theory and realization of his inventions was
Partnerships
Tesla had very little interest in the commercial development of his inventions, preferring to continue his
"dreaming" and trust that somehow funding would materialize. Opportunity came in the form of George
Westinghouse, an inventor and businessman from Pittsburgh who had made his fortune manufacturing air
brakes for the burgeoning railroad industry. Westinghouse saw Tesla's potential and Tesla accepted his offer of
one million dollars for his patents plus a royalty of one dollar per horsepower on all motors produced. Tesla
now had enormous riches to match his reputation and his genius.
The arrangement required that Tesla spend time at the Pittsburgh plant as production of his motors started up.
He did not enjoy the inevitable conflicts that arose in converting theoretical and pilot plant design to full scale
production and gladly returned to New York at the end of the year. Manufacture of the motors began soon
afterwards and Tesla happily went back to his laboratory. During the next four years, he received 45 U.S.
patents.
At this time, the major application for electricity was in lighting from the DC incandescent lamps developed by
Thomas Edison and the AC arc lights supplied by Westinghouse and the Thomson-Houston Company. The
United States financial climate in this era of industrial expansion was dominated by the demand for capital and
consolidations were common. Thomson-Houston merged with Edison and others to become the General
These potential partners demanded that Westinghouse cancel his royalty arrangement with Tesla, a step this
fellow inventor was reluctant to take. With no other choice, Westinghouse approached Tesla to cancel their
contract with its multimillion-dollar value while stressing his commitment to AC power and Tesla's efforts.
Citing his friend's confidence and support, Tesla simply tore up the contract. This hugely generous gesture
meant that the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company flourished. By definition, Tesla had also
shrunk the funding for his own further research and inventions by at least ten million dollars.
Electrical Endeavors
Now 33 years old, a rich man who had rejected marriage in favor of his devotion to science and nature, Tesla
applied his genius to wider, greater endeavors. He set out to investigate the limits of electromagnetic radiation.
He created an electric current operating at up to 10,000 cycles per second (the U.S. standard is 60) in an effort
to duplicate a light beam. He noted the advantage of high frequency current in the transformer used for
electricity transmission and went on to invent the Tesla coil transformers in insulating oil baths still in use
today. Tesla's experiments reached a frequency of 20,000 cycles per second at extremely high voltages. At an
address to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers in May, 1891, he caused a sensation by demonstrating
100,000 volt spark discharges five inches long, plus the brightest of electric lamps, from transformed
alternating current.
Tesla was now a public hero, celebrated everywhere, yet still obsessed with his appetite for knowledge of all
things electrical. He returned the favor of many invitations with elaborate meals for his guests followed by a
laboratory show of all kinds of spellbinding, glowing, sparking, and spinning objects driven by electricity. The
highlight was a demonstration in which he passed electric current through his body from head to toe, having
first determined the optimum frequency and power, then producing these conditions using his high-frequency
Eventually accepting European invitations, Tesla took his enlightening lecture and show of amazing electrical
experiments on the road. In just eight years since leaving Paris for the United States, Tesla had gone from
penniless immigrant to engineer to destitute ditch digger to international celebrity—all by the age of 36.
Among the innovative, and later widely adopted, inventions he demonstrated were neon and phosphorescent
lamps, electronic tubes for wireless signal reception, and coil tuning principles used in radios.
A War Won
While in Paris, Tesla learned of his mother's serious illness and left for Gospic; he was able to be with her
during her final weeks of life. He was treated as a national hero while in his homeland. A severe illness he
suffered while in Serbia prompted Tesla to self-examination and a resolution to avoid all further distractions
and concentrate on his experimentation. He returned to New York, resumed his solitary lifestyle, and restarted
In May, 1893, The Columbian Exhibition opened in Chicago with illumination inside and out supplied by the
Westinghouse Company using Tesla technologies. The Westinghouse installation was "outshining" Edison's
lighting efforts and Tesla supplied a spectacular personal rebuttal to Edison's claim that AC current was by
Since Tesla's first introduction of AC electricity, the "War of Electric Currents" had been waged, with Edison
insisting on the safety of DC current over AC current. The safeness in fact came from the minimal strength of
Westinghouse also used the Tesla polyphase system in harnessing the power of Niagara Falls to produce
37,300 kilowatts electrical output from ten generators and transmit it to Buffalo, which was 22 miles away.
which led to an altercation with the Police Department. From watching the machine's vibrations, he was side-
tracked into investigating the mechanical vibrations it caused. He came to believe that mechanical vibrational
resonance was similar to the resonances of electric current. The "high-vibrations" machine he built worked too
well. It operated strongly enough to raise neighborhood fears of an earthquake and caused the police shutdown
of his experiments.
In September, 1898, Tesla was again front page news with his demonstration of a remotely-controlled robotic
boat. The model boat was wirelessly controlled by the signals from Tesla's transmitter to its antenna and
receiver and then to a servomechanism which translated the signal to a variety of maneuvers: starting,
stopping, turning, etc. This was a remarkable combination of wireless telegraphy and robotics.
Tesla, an American citizen since 1889, offered this invention to the U.S. government but it was ridiculed and
rejected. A patent was granted in November, 1898, but only after the Chief Examiner had visited New York to
Next, Tesla returned to his experiments with power sources but having built an oscillator that produced 4
million volts, he had reached his laboratory's safety limitations and was short of money yet again.
An offer of much space and operating funds sent Tesla to Colorado Springs in May, 1899. The Tesla coil
transformers in Colorado were huge, 75 feet in diameter and produced correspondingly large voltages and
frequencies—artificial lightning bolts 135 feet long and accompanying thunder heard 15 miles away. Tesla had
charged the earth to a level that would only have been achievable by hundreds of natural lightning bolts.
Enough power was used to overload and cause short circuits at the powerhouse of the Colorado Springs
Electric Company. Again Tesla's experiments were curtailed and he returned to New York to report on his
findings. Further details of the Colorado experiments remained locked in Tesla's imagination until he died.
Advancing Humanity
Out of money again, Tesla returned to New York in the fall of 1899, satisfied that he had advanced his
overriding and glorious goal of improving the condition of humanity by extending scientific knowledge.
Through a friend, he published an article entitled "The Problem of Increasing Human Energy" which outlined
his personal philosophy and his Colorado discoveries. Tesla believed that the type of energy available had been
and would continue to be the controlling factor in the progress of the human condition, reducing such
developments to a mechanical process. Thus, by discovering and improving electrical energy, he was playing
J. Pierpont Morgan was Tesla's next benefactor. He had underwritten the Niagara Falls power system and was
aware of Tesla's genius and now supported his ideas on transmitting electric power through the earth and on
worldwide wireless broadcasting. Morgan could imagine the commercial potential, which never occurred to
Tesla, and the importance of controlling the release of the ideas' conclusions. Tesla now had a willing
Again, in 1900, Tesla set out to build a new plant in Long Island, New York, intended as a source of a
universal power supply and world-wide broadcasting. The enormous scope of his project never troubled Tesla;
with Morgan's first donation, he confidently went forward. Stanford White agreed to design the centerpiece
building of this new industrial city, a 154-foot-high tower to be the origin of the electrical power. Inevitably,
delays crept into the project and bills went unpaid. The project ceased in 1905 and Tesla returned to New York
City.
returned to the design of turbines and by 1910 had models available. However, his entry competed with
machinery which had been developed in the interval since Niagara when Tesla was occupied with his Colorado
and Long Island enterprises. Tesla's secretive nature and stubbornness caused problems and he met an
audience which was not inclined to cooperate. The Tesla turbine, a machine of great ingenuity and promise,
In 1912, the Nobel Committee announced that Nikola Tesla and Thomas Edison were the recipients of the
Physics Prize; instead, the prize went to Gustav Dalen. Details of the reversal are unclear but it is known that
Tesla refused the prize (and the $20,000 that came with it). Tesla differentiated between inspirational
discoverers such as himself and methodical improvers such as Edison; he gave greater value to the former.
Tesla was a pure scientist and Edison an applied scientist, and they should not be in combination. Tesla was
persuaded to accept the 1917 Edison Medal from the American Institute of Electrical Engineers but made his
disinterest noticeable.
Continued Progress
Tesla continued his work on power generation, making occasional announcements of progress which reached
the press. He mentioned many discoveries but supplied no experimental details. He had enough money to live
and always remained optimistic. There was talk of Tesla having invented a "death ray beam"; he spoke of
sending a beam from Earth to the dark side of the moon. The discovery of atomic physics sent Tesla's mind
racing to cosmic possibilities as he celebrated what he saw as the reach of man nearing that of “the Creator”.
He described himself as "merely an automaton endowed with power of movement, responding to the stimuli of
His admiration for the human mind stood in contrast to his definition of the human body as "a meat machine
Tesla died of heart failure, a forgotten man, on January 7, 1943, the Orthodox Christmas Day of that year.
Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation immediately removed the papers from Tesla's safe, citing
wartime security concerns. His funeral was conducted in New York, and his body was cremated.
Introduction (Science)
Michael Faraday first demonstrated the connection between magnetism and electricity by moving a magnet
inside a coil of wire. So long as the magnet moved in relation to the coil, an electric current was induced in the
wire; when the magnet was stationary, the current ceased. Faraday further suggested that the electromagnetic
forces which occurred spread into the area around the wire. The first electricity generator, known as a dynamo,
applied these principles with a cranked permanent magnet spinning inside a wire coil. Each time the magnet
turned, a current in alternating directions was produced, depending on which pole of the magnet was passing
the wire. All electric currents available at the time of this discovery were the direct currents from the batteries
invented by Alessandro Volta, so this alternating current was altered to direct by adding a commutator (switch)
The Gramme dynamo, which so intrigued Tesla, improved on previous versions. It was made up of a series of
thirty coils, connected in series with a commutator at each connection, placed inside a rotating, magnetized
iron ring. It created an almost uninterrupted direct current with the drawback that Tesla noticed—sparking at
the commutator brushes due to the tiny power disruptions. The dynamo was reversible; a supply of electricity
to the coils induced rotation of the magnet, which could be connected to the spindle of a motor. Electrical force
alternating current is sent to the coils, they become electromagnets where polarity rapidly changes with each
reversal of current flow. As the first coils are supplied with current, they create a magnetic field which starts
the core turning. When the first coil’s current supply reverses, the second coil set is at its maximum supply
point and creates its own magnetic field; the core spins on. In effect, the "magnetization" amount never varies
and a rotating magnetic field is created. The result is a smooth-running, commutator-free motor with the rotor
capacitor) through a spark gap. When the condenser is supplied with electric current, it continuously charges
up to reach the point where it achieves the selected breakdown voltage of the gap, and a spark results. At the
moment of sparking, the condenser and primary coil are connected and form an oscillating circuit.
As the charge-to-spark process is rapidly repeated, the high energy pulsation in the primary coil induces
voltage in the secondary transformer coil, which has many turns of smaller wire. Settings and adjustments of
each circuit control the oscillation frequencies of each circuit and optimum operation is achieved when the
oscillating frequencies match, i.e. resonate. Then, the oscillation in the second coil is multiplied, the coil
produces high voltage, and strong sparks are emitted by the secondary terminal. With this output voltage
reaching many millions of volts, some exceptional lightning-like discharges can be created.
Credits
The Nikola Tesla presentation was made possible by support from The Barra Foundation and Unisys.