Marconi My Beloved. Maria C. Marconi

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      MARCONI

      My Beloved

      By Maria Cristina Marconi

      2001 Centenary Edition

      Edited, Enlarged and Updated

      By Elettra Marconi

      DANTE UNIVERSITY PRESS,

      Boston

      © Copyright 2011

      Second edition

      (new chapters added by Elettra Marconi

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Marconi, Maria Cristina.

      [Mio marito Guglielmo. English]

      Marconi my beloved / by Maria Cristina Marconi. -- 1st English ed. / edited, enlarged, and updated by Elettra Marconi.

      p. cm.

      Published in eBook format by Dante University Press

      Converted by http://www.eBookIt.com

      ISBN-13: 978-0-9378-3236-3

      1. Marconi, Guglielmo, marchese, 1874-1937.

      2. Inventors--Italy Biography.

      3. Electric engineers--Italy Biography.

      4. Radio--Italy--History.

      5. Telegraph, Wireless--Marconi system--History.

      I. Marconi, Elettra.

      II. Title.

      TK5739.M3M27313 1999

      621.384'092--dc21

      [B]99-44852 CIP

      DANTE UNIVERSITY PRESS, PO Box 812158, Wellesley, MA 02482, Boston (Distributed by Branden Books)

      The documents at end are the property of Guglielmo Giovanelli Marconi, kindly given by the U.S. National Marconi Museum, Bedford, New Hampshire, U.S.A.

      Marchesa Maria Cristina Marconi

      with her daughter Elettra, 1935. (Photo Eva Barrett.)

      Dedico queste mie memorie degli anni vissuti con il mio marito, Guglielmo Marconi, alla mia diletta figlia Elettra e al caro nipote Guglielmo.

      I dedicate these memoirs of the intense years that I spent with my adored husband, Guglielmo Marconi, to my wonderful daughter, Elettra and to my dear grandson, Guglielmo.

      Acknowledgements

      I should like to thank Lord Prior, Sir Geoffrey Pattie, Lord Simpson, Gordon Bussey, Adolfo Caso, Paddy Clark, Michele Frattallone, John Hooley, Caroline Johnston, Henry Willard Lende Jr., Ray Minichiello, my son Guglielmo Giovanelli Marconi and all the dear friends who have encouraged and helped me to produce the new edition of Marconi My Beloved.

      A Tribute To GUGLIELMO MARCONI

      By Carlo Rubbia

      What strikes us most forcibly about Marconi’s style and the way in which he carried out his work is his modernity. Nowadays we talk more and more about inter-nationalism: our national frontiers coincide with those of Europe and our stage is the world. We are concerned about the purpose and aims of science which must not just produce knowledge but also contribute to improving our quality of life and have useful repercussions for the community. One hundred years ago the young Marconi was also a pioneer in this sense: his ability to be at the same time scientist, inventor and entrepreneur enabled him to operate without frontiers in an international dimension. This is a characteristic which profoundly differentiates Marconi’s work from that of the other great scientists of the time.

      Marconi was only in his early twenties when he brought his first experiments to a successful conclusion. Over twenty years had gone by since the great scientific revolution of electromag-netism, from Faraday to Hertz, together with Maxwell’s wonderful synthesis of the phenomenology of electromagnetic waves (1873). In that extraordinary victory of human knowledge, the unification of the electric and magnetic fields in electromagnetism, Italy was conspicuous by her absence. It was not until the end of the 1920s, with Enrico Fermi, that the first real school of theoretical physics at world level was established in our country.

      How can we explain this paradox? That is, that the fundamental, very important step of applying this knowledge completely escaped the scientific community of the time and that a young man in his early twenties with just a technical diploma, quite obviously on the periphery of the scientific activity of the day, was the first to realize the incredible opportunities offered by the so-called herzian waves for communicating at a distance without wires. In my opinion, this was due to an excessive “rationalization of concepts” on the part of the great majority of the scientific community of that time. Electromagnetic waves were then considered essentially like a form of “light”. We only have to think of Hertz’s classic experiments demonstrating diffraction, refraction, polarization, etc. From hertzian waves to X-rays, all waves were part of the same phenomenon: “unified” electromagnetic waves. Thus, once this mental framework had been accepted, hertzian waves would not have been able to increase the opportunities for using light to any great degree. After all, light does not climb mountains or cross oceans! Hertz died in 1894, one year before Marconi’s discovery while Maxwell had died in 1879. Neither of them was there to see the birth of one of the most important practical consequences of their research: the Radio. For all that, Marconi did not live in a cultural vacuum. He studied electromagnetic waves with Righi, who was then a Professor at Bologna; he made an extremely intelligent use of the technological developments of Calzecchi-Onesti, a fellow-countryman living in Lombardy, the inventor of the “coherer”.

      The scientific and entrepreneurial community in Italy was not culturally ready to support his invention or understand its importance. The Italian government turned down the exclusive rights to his patent and it was only in England that he found the means and the will to develop his discovery. Can we really say that things have changed in the last hundred years? Subsequently, Marconi was also covered with honours in Italy where he was made a life senator. However, jobs were created elsewhere, for example in Great Britain, where the Marconi Company still exists.

      Marconi’s great superiority and originality lay in his giving priority to the “empirical” side of scientific research, outside and beyond rational conjecture: precisely what we mean by “natural philosophy” or, alternatively, by the “Galilean spirit”. Obviously at that time nobody could rationally foresee the existence in the stratosphere, thanks to solar radiation, of a plasma reflector of medium-long electromagnetic waves which channels their propagation around the earth. They did not understand the properties of the long electromagnetic waves which are refracted in the troposphere and therefore follow the terrestrial curvature. Most scientific interest, polarized by Hertz’s experiments, was limited to the metric waves which correctly conform to the behaviour of light.

      Fortunately,

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