| 
			
 
 
			
			 by Nikola Tesla
 
			extracted from 
			Collier's Weekly, February 19, 1901
 
				
					
						| 
						Although
						Nikola Tesla in the early part of his career was 
						responsible for some brilliant work in electrical 
						research, in later years his projects got more 
						speculative and "other worldly".  
						In 
						particular, his ideas here about long-distance 
						transmissions were pretty vague, and seem to have been 
						based on theories about electrical conduction and 
						induction, and not radio, which uses electro-magnetic 
						radiation.  
						In any 
						event, in spite of his promise to "soon convert the 
						disbelievers", most of what he talks about here was 
						never clearly explained or ever demonstrated to actually 
						work. |  
			
 
			EDITOR'S NOTE 
			  
			--Mr. Nikola Tesla 
			has accomplished some marvelous results in electrical discoveries. 
			Now, with the dawn of the new century, he announces an achievement 
			which will amaze the entire universe, and which eclipses the wildest 
			dream of the most visionary scientist. He has received 
			communication, he asserts, from out the great void of space: a 
			call from the inhabitants of Mars, or Venus, 
			or some other sister planet! And, furthermore, noted scientists like
			Sir Norman Lockyer are disposed to agree with Mr. Tesla 
			in his startling deductions.  
			Mr. Tesla has not only discovered many important principles, 
			but most of his inventions are in practical use: notably in the 
			harnessing of the Titanic forces of Niagara Falls, and the discovery 
			of a new light by means of a vacuum tube. He has, he declares, 
			solved the problem of telegraphing without wires or artificial 
			conductors of any sort, using the earth as his medium. By means of 
			this principle he expects to be able to send messages under the 
			ocean, and to any distance on the earth's surface. Interplanetary 
			communication has interested him for years, and he sees no reason 
			why we should not soon be within talking distance of Mars 
			or of all worlds in the solar system that may be tenanted by 
			intelligent beings.
 
			At the request of COLLIER'S WEEKLY Mr. Tesla presents 
			herewith a frank statement of what he expects to accomplish and how 
			he hopes to establish communication with the planets.
 
			  
 
			  
			THE IDEA of 
			communicating with the inhabitants of other worlds is 
			an old one. But for ages it has been regarded merely as a poet's 
			dream, forever unrealizable. And with the invention and perfection 
			of the telescope and the ever-widening knowledge of the heavens, its 
			hold upon our imaginations has been increased, and the scientific 
			achievements during the latter part of the nineteenth century, 
			together with the development of the tendency toward the nature 
			ideal of Goethe, have intensified it to such a degree that it 
			seems as if it were destined to become the dominating idea of the 
			century that has just begun. The desire to know something of our 
			neighbors in the immense depths of space does not spring from idle 
			curiosity nor from thirst for knowledge, but from a deeper cause, 
			and it is a feeling firmly rooted in the heart of every human being 
			capable of thinking at all.  
			  
			Whence, then, does 
			it come? Who knows? Who can assign limits to the subtlety of 
			nature's influences? Perhaps, if we could clearly perceive all the 
			intricate mechanism of the glorious spectacle that is continually 
			unfolding before us, and could, also, trace this desire to its 
			distant origin, we might find it in the sorrowful vibrations of the 
			earth which began when it parted from its celestial parent.
 But in this age of reason it is not astonishing to find persons who 
			scoff at the very thought of effecting communication with a 
			planet. First of all, the argument is made that there is 
			only a small probability of other planets being inhabited at all. 
			This argument has never appealed to me. In the solar system, there 
			seem to be only two planets--Venus and Mars--capable 
			of sustaining life such as ours: but this does not mean that there 
			might not be on all of them some other forms of life. 
			Chemical processes may be maintained without the aid of oxygen, and 
			it is still a question whether chemical processes are absolutely 
			necessary for the sustenance of organized beings.
 
			  
			My idea is that 
			the development of life must lead to forms of existence that will be 
			possible without nourishment and which will not be shackled by 
			consequent limitations. Why should a living being not be able to 
			obtain all the energy it needs for the performance of its life 
			functions from the environment, instead of through 
			consumption of food, and transforming, by a complicated process, the 
			energy of chemical combinations into life-sustaining energy?
 If there were such beings on one of the planets we should know next 
			to nothing about them. Nor is it necessary to go so far in our 
			assumptions, for we can readily conceive that, in the same degree as 
			the atmosphere diminishes in density, moisture disappears and the 
			planet freezes up, organic life might also undergo corresponding 
			modifications, leading finally to forms which, according to our 
			present ideas of life, are impossible.
 
			  
			I will readily admit, of 
			course, that if there should be a sudden catastrophe of any kind all 
			life processes might be arrested; but if the change, no matter how 
			great, should be gradual, and occupied ages, so that the 
			ultimate results could be intelligently foreseen, I cannot but think 
			that reasoning beings would still find means of existence. They 
			would adapt themselves to their constantly changing environment. So 
			I think it quite possible that in a frozen planet, such as our moon 
			is supposed to be, intelligent beings may still dwell, 
			in its interior, if not on its surface.
 
			
			SIGNALING AT 100,000,000 MILES!
 
			Then it is contended that it is beyond human power and ingenuity 
			to convey signals to the almost inconceivable distances of fifty 
			million or one hundred million miles. This might have been a valid 
			argument formerly. It is not so now. Most of those who are 
			enthusiastic upon the subject of interplanetary communication 
			have reposed their faith in the light-ray as the best possible 
			medium of such communication. True, waves of light, owing to their 
			immense rapidity of succession, can penetrate space more readily 
			than waves less rapid, but a simple consideration will show that by 
			their means an exchange of signals between this earth and its 
			companions in the solar system is, at least now, impossible.
 
			  
			By 
			way of illustration, let us suppose that a square mile of the 
			earth's surface--the smallest area that might possibly be within 
			reach of the best telescopic vision of other worlds--were covered 
			with incandescent lamps, packed closely together so as to form, when 
			illuminated, a continuous sheet of light. It would require not less 
			than one hundred million horse-power to light this 
			area of lamps, and this is many times the amount of motive power now 
			in the service of man throughout the world. 
			 
			But with the novel 
			means, proposed by myself, I can readily demonstrate that, with an 
			expenditure not exceeding two thousand horse-power, signals 
			can be transmitted to a planet such as Mars with as much 
			exactness and certitude as we now send messages by wire from New 
			York to Philadelphia. These means are the result of long-continued 
			experiment and gradual improvement.
 Some ten years ago, I recognized the fact that to convey electric 
			currents to a distance it was not at all necessary to employ a 
			return wire, but that any amount of energy might be transmitted by 
			using a single wire. I illustrated this principle by numerous 
			experiments, which, at that time, excited considerable attention 
			among scientific men.
 
 This being practically demonstrated, my next step was to use 
			the earth itself as the medium for conducting the currents, 
			thus dispensing with wires and all other artificial conductors. So I 
			was led to the development of a system of energy transmission and of 
			telegraphy without the use of wires, which I described in 
			1893. The difficulties I encountered at first in the transmission of 
			currents through the earth were very great. At that time I had at 
			hand only ordinary apparatus, which I found to be ineffective, and I 
			concentrated my attention immediately upon perfecting machines for 
			this special purpose.
 
			  
			This work consumed a number of years, but I 
			finally vanquished all difficulties and succeeded in producing a 
			machine which, to explain its operation in plain language, resembled 
			a pump in its action, drawing electricity from the earth 
			and driving it back into the same at an enormous rate, thus creating 
			ripples or disturbances which, spreading through the earth as 
			through a wire, could be detected at great distances by carefully 
			attuned receiving circuits. In this manner I was able to transmit to 
			a distance, not only feeble effects for the purposes of signaling, 
			but considerable amounts of energy, and later discoveries I made 
			convinced me that I shall ultimately succeed in conveying power 
			without wires, for industrial purposes, with high economy, and to 
			any distance, however great. 
			 
			  
			EXPERIMENTS 
			IN COLORADO 
			To develop these inventions further, I went to Colorado 
			in where I continued my investigations along these and other lines, 
			one of which in particular I now consider of even greater importance 
			than the transmission of power without wires. I constructed a 
			laboratory in the neighborhood of Pike's Peak. The 
			conditions in the pure air of the Colorado Mountains 
			proved extremely favorable for my experiments, and the results were 
			most gratifying to me. I found that I could not only accomplish more 
			work, physically and mentally, than I could in New York, 
			but that electrical effects and changes were more readily and 
			distinctly perceived.
 
			  
			A few years ago it was virtually impossible to 
			produce electrical sparks twenty or thirty foot long; but I produced 
			some more than one hundred feet in length, and this without 
			difficulty. The rates of electrical movement involved in strong 
			induction apparatus had measured but a few hundred horse-power, and 
			I produced electrical movements of rates of one hundred and ten 
			thousand horse-power. Prior to this, only insignificant electrical 
			pressures were obtained, while I have reached fifty million volts.
 The accompanying illustrations, with their descriptive titles, taken 
			from an article I wrote for the "Century Magazine," ["The 
			Problem of Increasing Human Energy"] 
			may serve to convey an idea of the results I obtained in the 
			directions indicated.
 
 Many persons in my own profession have wondered at them and have 
			asked what I am trying to do. But the time is not far away now when 
			the practical results of my labors will be placed before the world 
			and their influence felt everywhere. One of the immediate 
			consequences will be the transmission of messages without wires, 
			over sea or land, to an immense distance. I have already 
			demonstrated, by crucial tests, the practicability of signaling by 
			my system from one to any other point of the globe, no matter how 
			remote, and I shall soon convert the disbelievers.
 
 I have every reason for congratulating myself that throughout these 
			experiments, many of which were exceedingly delicate and hazardous, 
			neither myself nor any of my assistants received any injury. When 
			working with these powerful electrical oscillations 
			the most extraordinary phenomena take place at times. Owing to some 
			interference of the oscillations, veritable balls of fire 
			are apt to leap out to a great distance, and if any one were within 
			or near their paths, he would be instantly destroyed. A machine such 
			as I have used could easily kill, in an instant, three hundred 
			thousand persons. I observed that the strain upon my assistants was 
			telling, and some of them could not endure the extreme tension of 
			the nerves. But these perils are now entirely overcome, and the 
			operation of such apparatus, however powerful, involves no risk 
			whatever.
 
 As I was improving my machines for the production of intense 
			electrical actions, I was also perfecting the means for observing 
			feeble effects. One of the most interesting results, and also one of 
			great practical importance, was the development of certain 
			contrivances for indicating at a distance of many hundred miles an 
			approaching storm, its direction, speed and distance traveled. These 
			appliances are likely to be valuable in future meteorological 
			observations and surveying, and will lend themselves particularly to 
			many naval uses.
 
 It was in carrying on this work that for the first time I discovered 
			those mysterious effects which have elicited such 
			unusual interest. I had perfected the apparatus referred to so far 
			that from my laboratory in the Colorado mountains I 
			could feel the pulse of the globe, as it were, noting every 
			electrical change that occurred within a radius of eleven hundred 
			miles.
 
 
			
			TERRIFIED BY SUCCESS
 
			I can never forget the first sensations I experienced when it dawned 
			upon me that I had observed something possibly of incalculable 
			consequences to mankind. I felt as though I were present at the 
			birth of a new knowledge or the revelation of a great truth. Even 
			now, at times, I can vividly recall the incident, and see my 
			apparatus as though it were actually before me. My first 
			observations positively terrified me, as there was present in them 
			something mysterious, not to say supernatural, and I was alone in my 
			laboratory at night; but at that time the idea of these disturbances 
			being intelligently controlled signals did not yet present itself to 
			me.
 
 The changes I noted were taking place periodically, and with such a 
			clear suggestion of number and order that they were not traceable to 
			any cause then known to me. I was familiar, of course, with such 
			electrical disturbances as are produced by the Sun, 
			Aurora Borealis and Earth currents, and I 
			was as sure as I could be of any fact that these variations were due 
			to none of these causes. The nature of my experiments precluded 
			the possibility of the changes being produced by atmospheric 
			disturbances, as has been rashly asserted by some. It was some 
			time afterward when the thought flashed upon my mind that the 
			disturbances I had observed might be due to an intelligent control.
 
			  
			Although I could not decipher their meaning, it was impossible for 
			me to think of them as having been entirely accidental. The feeling 
			is constantly growing on me that I had been the first to hear 
			the greeting of one planet to another. A purpose was behind 
			these electrical signals; and it was with this conviction 
			that I announced to the Red Cross Society, when it 
			asked me to indicate one of the great possible achievements of the 
			next hundred years, that it would probably be the confirmation and 
			interpretation of this planetary challenge to us.
 Since my return to New York more urgent work has 
			consumed all my attention; but I have never ceased to think of those 
			experiences and of the observations made in Colorado. 
			I am constantly endeavoring to improve and perfect my apparatus, and 
			just as soon as practicable I shall again take up the thread of my 
			investigations at the point where I have been forced to lay it down 
			for a time.
 
 
			
			COMMUNICATING WITH THE MARTIANS
 
			At the present stage of progress, there would be no insurmountable 
			obstacle in constructing a machine capable of conveying a message to
			Mars, nor would there be any great difficulty in 
			recording signals transmitted to us by the inhabitants of that 
			planet, if they be skilled electricians. Communication once 
			established, even in the simplest way, as by a mere interchange of 
			numbers, the progress toward more intelligible communication would 
			be rapid.
 
			  
			Absolute certitude as to the receipt and interchange of 
			messages would be reached as soon as we could respond with the 
			number "four," say, in reply to the signal "one, two, three." The 
			Martians, or the inhabitants of whatever planet had 
			signaled to us, would understand at once that we had caught their 
			message across the gulf of space and had sent back a response. To 
			convey a knowledge of form by such means is, while very difficult, 
			not impossible, and I have already found a way of doing it.
 What a tremendous stir this would make in the world! How soon will 
			it come? For that it will some time be accomplished must be clear to 
			every thoughtful being.
 
 Something, at least, science has gained. But I hope that it will 
			also be demonstrated soon that in my experiments in the West I was 
			not merely beholding a vision, but had caught sight of a great and 
			profound truth.
 
			 
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