Nikola Tesla, geboren am 10. Juli 1856 in Smiljan, Kroatien und verstorben am 7. Januar 1943 in New York City, USA war ein Technik-Forscher und Erfinder.
Sein Lebenswerk ist geprägt durch zahlreiche Neuerungen auf dem Gebiet der Elektrotechnik, insbesondere der elektrischen Energietechnik, wie die Entwicklung des heute als Zweiphasenwechselstrom bezeichneten Systems zur elektrischen Energieübertragung. Tesla erhielt in 26 Ländern über 280 Patente, davon 112 in den USA.
Müsste Edison eine Nadel im Heuhaufen finden, würde er einer fleißigen Biene gleich Strohhalm um Strohhalm untersuchen, bis er das Gesuchte gefunden hat.
Quelle
über Thomas Alva Edison, New York Times, 19. Oktober 1931Nikola Tesla wurde in Smiljan, Kroatien, geboren.
Bilder zum Thema Nikola Tesla
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Bildquelle: A_letter_by_Nikola_Tesla,_Adligat,_Belgrade.jpg Autor: Wikipedia / This image was made by Sadko.
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This orthodox Serbian religious book gives by Milutin Tesla to his son Nikola. Nikola Tesla will have him permanently on him all his life and he will be found on him at his death.
Emissions, Radio Tesla No. 13 on the Radio News, 8/16/2014.
Guest PhD candidate in physics, ing. Miloš Ćorlomanović, topics and presenting work.
Emissions, Radio Tesla No. 15 on the Radio News, 9/13/2014.
Guest PhD candidate in physics, ing. Miloš Ćorlomanović, topics quantum medicine, quantum information technology and programming of water, the author of the show, journalist Vesna Pešić.
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Bildquelle: HCD-Tesla.JPG Autor: Wikipedia / Duhh at Croatian Wikipedia Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Praha-Dejvice, ulice Nikoly Tesly, pamětní deska Nikoly Tesly.
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Bildquelle: LA2-NSRW-4-0443.jpg Autor: Wikipedia / unbekannt Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Nikola Tesla's letters to Radoje Janković, consul general of Yugoslavia in New York (sent in 1934 and 1935). They can be found in the Society for Culture, Art and International Cooperation Adligat in Belgrade, Serbia.
Neutrally buoyant dye are injected upstream at Reynolds number 200.
a, c: Forward direction. Two adjacent filaments remain in the central corridor of the conduit with only small lateral deflections. b, d: Reverse direction. The filaments ricochet off the periodic structures, deflecting increasingly sharply before being rerouted around the 'islands' and mixing.
Nikola Tesla holding in his hands balls of flame by Warwick Goble. Illustration from the article by Chauncy Montgomery M'Govern, "The New Wizard of the West: An interview with Tesla, the Modern Miracle-Worker, who is Harnessing the Rays of the Sun; has Discovered Ways of Transmitting Power without Wires and of Seeing by Telephone; has Invented a Means of Employing Electricity as a Fertiliser; and, Finally, is Able to Manufacture Artificial Daylight", Pearson's Magazine, May 1899, p. 471
Famous photograph of Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla in his laboratory in Colorado Springs December 1899, supposedly sitting reading next to his giant "magnifying transmitter" high voltage generator while the machine produced huge bolts of electricity. The photo was a promotional stunt by photographer Dickenson V. Alley; a double exposure. First the machine's huge sparks were photographed in the darkened room, then the photographic plate was exposed again with the machine off and Tesla sitting in the chair. In his Colorado Springs Notes Tesla admitted that the photo is false:
"Of course, the discharge was not playing when the experimenter was photographed, as might be imagined!" Tesla's biographers Carl Willis and Mark Seifer confirm this.
During 1899-1900 Tesla built this laboratory and researched wireless transmission of electric power there. The Magnifying Transmitter, one of the largest Tesla coils ever built, with input power of 300 kW could produce potentials of around 12 million volts at a frequency of about 150 kHz, creating 130 ft. (41 m) "lightning bolts". The arcs in the image are 22 feet long. These long arcs were not a feature of the normal operation of the coil because they wasted energy; for these photos Tesla forced the machine to produce arcs by switching the power rapidly on and off.
The photo was part of a publicity spread taken by photographer Dickinson Alley in December 1899 to accompany Tesla's magazine article Nikola Tesla, "The Problem of Increasing Human Energy", Century Magazine, The Century Co., New York, June 1900, fig. 8; a version without Tesla appears in the article.
Wellcome Images
Keywords: Electrical energy; Electric; Power; Electricity; Energy; Volt; Power (Psychology); Static; Voltage; Laboratories; Nikola Tesla
Famous photograph of Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla in his laboratory in Colorado Springs around 1899, supposedly sitting reading next to his giant "magnifying transmitter" high voltage generator while the machine produced huge bolts of electricity. The photo was a promotional stunt by photographer Dickenson V. Alley; a double exposure. First the machine's huge sparks were photographed in the darkened room, then the photographic plate was exposed again with the machine off and Tesla sitting in the chair. In his Colorado Springs Notes Tesla admitted that the photo is false:
"Of course, the discharge was not playing when the experimenter was photographed, as might be imagined!" Tesla's biographers Carl Willis and Mark Seifer confirm this.
During 1899-1900 Tesla built this laboratory and researched wireless transmission of electric power there. The Magnifying Transmitter, one of the largest Tesla coils ever built, with input power of 300 kW could produce potentials of around 12 million volts at a frequency of about 150 kHz, creating 130 ft. (41 m) "lightning bolts". The arcs in the image are 22 feet long. When he first turned it on, the machine blew out the Colorado Springs power company's generator. These long arcs were not a feature of the normal operation of the coil because they wasted energy; for these photos Tesla forced the machine to produce arcs by switching the power rapidly on and off.
Famous photograph of Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla in his laboratory in Colorado Springs around 1899, supposedly sitting reading next to his giant "magnifying transmitter" high voltage generator while the machine produced huge bolts of electricity. The photo was a promotional stunt by photographer Dickenson V. Alley; a double exposure. First the machine's huge sparks were photographed in the darkened room, then the photographic plate was exposed again with the machine off and Tesla sitting in the chair. In his Colorado Springs Notes Tesla admitted that the photo is false:
"Of course, the discharge was not playing when the experimenter was photographed, as might be imagined!" Tesla's biographers Carl Willis and Mark Seifer confirm this.
During 1899-1900 Tesla built this laboratory and researched wireless transmission of electric power there. The Magnifying Transmitter, one of the largest Tesla coils ever built, with input power of 300 kW could produce potentials of around 12 million volts at a frequency of about 150 kHz, creating 130 ft. (41 m) "lightning bolts". The arcs in the image are 22 feet long. When he first turned it on, the machine blew out the Colorado Springs power company's generator. These long arcs were not a feature of the normal operation of the coil because they wasted energy; for these photos Tesla forced the machine to produce arcs by switching the power rapidly on and off.
Bildquelle: Pismo_Janka_Veselinovića_Nikoli_Tesli.jpg Autor: Wikipedia / This image was made by Sadko.
Please credit this with: "Sadko, Wikipedia" in the immediate vicinity of the image.
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If you wish to use, license, or buy the image, please contact me to discuss terms.
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A letter by Serbian writer Janko Veselinović to Nikola Tesla, National Museum of Šabac.
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Bildquelle: Putovnica_Nikola_Tesla_01081.JPG Autor: Wikipedia / Kr. hrv.-slav.-dalm. zemaljska vlada / Kön. kroat.-slav.-dalm. Landes-Regierung Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Putovnica Nikole Tesle
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Bildquelle: Putovnica_Nikola_Tesla_01082.JPG Autor: Wikipedia / Kr. hrv.-slav.-dalm. zemaljska vlada / Kön. kroat.-slav.-dalm. Landes-Regierung Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Passport of Nikola Tesla, page 1, 1883.
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Bildquelle: Putovnica_Nikola_Tesla_01083.JPG Autor: Wikipedia / Kr. hrv.-slav.-dalm. zemaljska vlada / Kön. kroat.-slav.-dalm. Landes-Regierung Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Putovnica Nikole Tesle
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Bildquelle: Putovnica_Nikola_Tesla_01084.JPG Autor: Wikipedia / Kr. hrv.-slav.-dalm. zemaljska vlada / Kön. kroat.-slav.-dalm. Landes-Regierung Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Putovnica Nikole Tesle
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Bildquelle: Putovnica_Nikola_Tesla_01085.JPG Autor: Wikipedia / Kr. hrv.-slav.-dalm. zemaljska vlada / Kön. kroat.-slav.-dalm. Landes-Regierung Lizenz: gemeinfrei
Inventor and engineer Nikola Tesla moved into rooms 3327 and 3328 of the Hotel New Yorker in 1933. He died in 1943 at age 86 in room 3327, the smaller of the two. Today plaques on both doors commemorate his life and work.
Nikola Tesla war ein 🙋♂️ kroatischer Erfinder und Physiker
Wie alt wurde Nikola Tesla?
Nikola Tesla erreichte ein Alter von ⌛ 86 Jahren.
Wann hat Nikola Tesla Geburtstag?
Nikola Tesla wurde an einem Donnerstag am ⭐ 10. Juli 1856 geboren.
Wo wurde Nikola Tesla geboren?
Nikola Tesla wurde in 🚩 Smiljan, Kroatien, geboren.
Wann starb Nikola Tesla?
Nikola Tesla ist am ✟ 7. Januar 1943 in New York City, USA, gestorben.
In welchem Sternzeichen wurde Nikola Tesla geboren?
Nikola Tesla wurde im westlichen Sternzeichen ♋ Krebs geboren.
Wie groß war Nikola Tesla?
Nikola Tesla hatte eine Größe von ca. 📏 1,98 m. Damit ist er größer als die meisten deutschen Männer. Laut Statistik von 2021 beträgt die durchschnittliche Körpergröße eines Mannes in Deutschland 1,79 m.
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