Telegraph
Key and Sounder
(An
Electromagnetism Project)
Introduction:
Telegraph is one of the first
applications of electromagnet. In this project you will make a
telegraph key and sounder.
Materials for this project (shown
here) are available in all versions of MiniScience
Electromagnetism Kits.
- Base board
- Magnet wire
- Key and sounder metal strips
- Nail and screws
- Battery Holder
|
Additional materials in the kit
are for other projects. |
History
of telegraph
The Beginning of Electronic
Communications
In 1825, British inventor William
Sturgeon exhibited a device that laid the foundations for large-scale
electronic communications: the electromagnet. Sturgeon displayed its
power by lifting nine pounds with a seven-ounce piece of iron wrapped
with wires through which the current of a single cell battery was sent.
In 1830, an American, Joseph Henry,
demonstrated the potential of Sturgeon's device for long distance
communication by sending an electronic current over one mile of wire to
activate an electromagnet which caused a bell to strike. Thus the
electric telegraph was born. Samuel F.B. Morse (1791-1872) successfully
exploited Henry's invention commercially.
While a professor of arts and design
at New York University in 1835, Samuel Morse proved that signals could
be transmitted by wire. He used pulses of current to deflect an
electromagnet, which moved a marker to produce written codes on a strip
of paper - the invention of Morse Code. The following year, the device
was modified to emboss the paper with dots and dashes. He gave a public
demonstration in 1838, but it was not until five years later that
Congress (reflecting public apathy) funded $30,000 to construct an
experimental telegraph line from Washington to Baltimore, a distance of
40 miles.
Procedure: |