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AWESOME DEMONSTATION Coherer Effect!!!

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Premiered Apr 1, 2026
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The coherer effect is a physical phenomenon where the electrical resistance of a loose metallic powder (such as iron or nickel filings) drops drastically when exposed to radio frequency (RF) radiation or high-voltage surges. It was the scientific principle behind the coherer, the very first practical detector used in early wireless telegraphy at the end of the 19th century. How the Effect Works High Resistance State: Normally, metal filings in a glass tube touch each other loosely. Because each grain is coated in a thin layer of oxide, the overall electrical resistance is very high, acting like an "open" switch. The "Cohering" Action: When a radio wave hits the filings, it induces tiny voltages that cause microscopic sparks or "micro-welds" between the grains. This creates a conductive path, and the resistance drops from thousands of ohms to nearly zero. The Result: This sudden conductivity allows current from a local battery to flow through the tube and trigger a device, such as a bell or a telegraph sounder. The "Decoherer": Once the filings "cohere," they stay conductive even after the radio signal stops. To detect the next bit of Morse code, the tube must be physically tapped (usually by a mechanical hammer) to shake the filings apart and restore high resistance. Historical Context Discovery: The effect was primarily investigated by Édouard Branly in 1890 (often called the Branly effect). The Marconi Connection: Guglielmo Marconi refined the coherer into a reliable instrument, using it to achieve the first transatlantic radio transmission in 1901. Obsolescence: By the mid-1900s, it was replaced by crystal detectors and vacuum tubes, which were much faster and could receive voice/audio rather than just on/off telegraph pulses.

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AWESOME DEMONSTATION Coherer Effect!!! | NatokHD