08 May 2009
Communications satellite
The invention: Telstar I, the world’s first commercial communications
satellite, opened the age of live, worldwide television by
connecting the United States and Europe.
The people behind the invention:
Arthur C. Clarke (1917- ), a British science-fiction writer
who in 1945 first proposed the idea of using satellites as
communications relays
John R. Pierce (1910- ), an American engineer who worked
on the Echo and Telstar satellite communications projects
Science Fiction?
In 1945, Arthur C. Clarke suggested that a satellite orbiting high
above the earth could relay television signals between different stations
on the ground, making for a much wider range of transmission
than that of the usual ground-based systems. Writing in the
February, 1945, issue of Wireless World, Clarke said that satellites
“could give television and microwave coverage to the entire
planet.”
In 1956, John R. Pierce at the Bell Telephone Laboratories of the
American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) began to urge
the development of communications satellites. He saw these satellites
as a replacement for the ocean-bottom cables then being used to
carry transatlantic telephone calls. In 1950, about one-and-a-half
million transatlantic calls were made, and that number was expected
to grow to three million by 1960, straining the capacity of the
existing cables; in 1970, twenty-one million calls were made.
Communications satellites offered a good, cost-effective alternative
to building more transatlantic telephone cables. On January 19,
1961, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) gave permission
for AT&T to begin Project Telstar, the first commercial communications
satellite bridging the Atlantic Ocean.AT&T reached an
agreement with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA) in July, 1961, in which AT&T would pay $3 million for each Telstar launch. The Telstar project involved about four hundred
scientists, engineers, and technicians at the Bell Telephone
Laboratories, twenty more technical personnel at AT&T headquarters,
and the efforts of more than eight hundred other companies
that provided equipment or services.
Telstar 1 was shaped like a faceted sphere, was 88 centimeters in
diameter, and weighed 80 kilograms. Most of its exterior surface
(sixty of the seventy-four facets) was covered by 3,600 solar cells to
convert sunlight into 15 watts of electricity to power the satellite.
Each solar cell was covered with artificial sapphire to reduce the
damage caused by radiation. The main instrument was a two-way
radio able to handle six hundred telephone calls at a time or one
television channel.
The signal that the radio would send back to Earth was very
weak—less than one-thirtieth the energy used by a household light
bulb. Large ground antennas were needed to receive Telstar’s faint
signal. The main ground station was built by AT&T in Andover,
Maine, on a hilltop informally called “Space Hill.” A horn-shaped
antenna, weighing 380 tons, with a length of 54 meters and an open
end with an area of 1,097 square meters, was mounted so that it
could rotate to track Telstar across the sky. To protect it from wind
and weather, the antenna was built inside an inflated dome, 64 meters
in diameter and 49 meters tall. It was, at the time, the largest inflatable
structure ever built. A second, smaller horn antenna in
Holmdel, New Jersey, was also used.International Cooperation
In February, 1961, the governments of the United States and England
agreed to let the British Post Office and NASAwork together
to test experimental communications satellites. The British Post Office
built a 26-meter-diameter steerable dish antenna of its own design
at Goonhilly Downs, near Cornwall, England. Under a similar
agreement, the French National Center for Telecommunications
Studies constructed a ground station, almost identical to the Andover
station, at Pleumeur-Bodou, Brittany, France.
After testing, Telstar 1 was moved to Cape Canaveral, Florida,
and attached to the Thor-Delta launch vehicle built by the Douglas Aircraft Company. The Thor-Delta was launched at 3:35 a.m. eastern
standard time (EST) on July 10, 1962. Once in orbit, Telstar 1 took
157.8 minutes to circle the globe. The satellite came within range of
the Andover station on its sixth orbit, and a television test pattern
was transmitted to the satellite at 6:26 p.m. EST. At 6:30 p.m. EST, a
tape-recorded black-and-white image of the American flag with the
Andover station in the background, transmitted from Andover to
Holmdel, opened the first television show ever broadcast by satellite.
Live pictures of U.S. vice president Lyndon B. Johnson and
other officials gathered at Carnegie Institution inWashington, D.C.,
followed on the AT&T program carried live on all three American
networks.
Up to the moment of launch, it was uncertain if the French station
would be completed in time to participate in the initial test. At 6:47
p.m. EST, however, Telstar’s signal was picked up by the station in
Pleumeur-Bodou, and Johnson’s image became the first television
transmission to cross the Atlantic. Pictures received at the French
station were reported to be so clear that they looked like they had
been sent from only forty kilometers away. Because of technical difficulties,
the English station was unable to receive a clear signal.
The first formal exchange of programming between the United
States and Europe occurred on July 23, 1962. This special eighteenminute
program, produced by the European Broadcasting Union,
consisted of live scenes from major cities throughout Europe and
was transmitted from Goonhilly Downs, where the technical difficulties
had been corrected, to Andover via Telstar.
On the previous orbit, a program entitled “America, July 23,
1962,” showing scenes from fifty television cameras around the
United States, was beamed from Andover to Pleumeur-Bodou and
seen by an estimated one hundred million viewers throughout Europe.Consequences
Telstar 1 and the communications satellites that followed it revolutionized
the television news and sports industries. Before, television
networks had to ship film across the oceans, meaning delays of
hours or days between the time an event occurred and the broadcast of pictures of that event on television on another continent. Now,
news of major significance, as well as sporting events, can be viewed
live around the world. The impact on international relations also
was significant, with world opinion becoming able to influence the
actions of governments and individuals, since those actions could
be seen around the world as the events were still in progress.
More powerful launch vehicles allowed new satellites to be placed
in geosynchronous orbits, circling the earth at a speed the same as
the earth’s rotation rate. When viewed from the ground, these satellites
appeared to remain stationary in the sky. This allowed continuous
communications and greatly simplified the ground antenna
system. By the late 1970’s, private individuals had built small antennas
in their backyards to receive television signals directly from the
satellites.
04 May 2009
Colossus computer
The invention: The first all-electronic calculating device, the Colossus
computer was built to decipher German military codes
during World War II.
The people behind the invention:
Thomas H. Flowers, an electronics expert
Max H. A. Newman (1897-1984), a mathematician
Alan Mathison Turing (1912-1954), a mathematician
C. E. Wynn-Williams, a member of the Telecommunications
Research Establishment
An Undercover Operation
In 1939, during World War II (1939-1945), a team of scientists,
mathematicians, and engineers met at Bletchley Park, outside London,
to discuss the development of machines that would break the
secret code used in Nazi military communications. The Germans
were using a machine called “Enigma” to communicate in code between
headquarters and field units. Polish scientists, however, had
been able to examine a German Enigma and between 1928 and 1938
were able to break the codes by using electromechanical codebreaking
machines called “bombas.” In 1938, the Germans made the
Enigma more complicated, and the Polish were no longer able to
break the codes. In 1939, the Polish machines and codebreaking
knowledge passed to the British.
Alan Mathison Turing was one of the mathematicians gathered
at Bletchley Park to work on codebreaking machines. Turing was
one of the first people to conceive of the universality of digital computers.
He first mentioned the “Turing machine” in 1936 in an article
published in the Proceedings of the London Mathematical Society.
The Turing machine, a hypothetical device that can solve any
problem that involves mathematical computation, is not restricted
to only one task—hence the universality feature.
Turing suggested an improvement to the Bletchley codebreaking
machine, the “Bombe,” which had been modeled on the Polish bomba. This improvement increased the computing power of the
machine. The new codebreaking machine replaced the tedious
method of decoding by hand, which in addition to being slow,
was ineffective in dealing with complicated encryptions that were
changed daily.
Building a Better Mousetrap
The Bombe was very useful. In 1942, when the Germans started
using a more sophisticated cipher machine known as the “Fish,”
Max H. A. Newman, who was in charge of one subunit at Bletchley
Park, believed that an automated device could be designed to break
the codes produced by the Fish. Thomas H. Flowers, who was in
charge of a switching group at the Post Office Research Station at
Dollis Hill, had been approached to build a special-purpose electromechanical
device for Bletchley Park in 1941. The device was not
useful, and Flowers was assigned to other problems.
Flowers began to work closely with Turing, Newman, and C. E.
Wynn-Williams of the Telecommunications Research Establishment
(TRE) to develop a machine that could break the Fish codes. The
Dollis Hill team worked on the tape driving and reading problems,
and Wynn-Williams’s team at TRE worked on electronic counters
and the necessary circuitry. Their efforts produced the “Heath Robinson,”
which could read two thousand characters per second. The
Heath Robinson used vacuum tubes, an uncommon component in
the early 1940’s. The vacuum tubes performed more reliably and
rapidly than the relays that had been used for counters. Heath Robinson
and the companion machines proved that high-speed electronic
devices could successfully do cryptoanalytic work (solve decoding
problems).
Entirely automatic in operation once started, the Heath Robinson
was put together at Bletchley Park in the spring of 1943. The Heath
Robinson became obsolete for codebreaking shortly after it was put
into use, so work began on a bigger, faster, and more powerful machine:
the Colossus.
Flowers led the team that designed and built the Colossus in
eleven months at Dollis Hill. The first Colossus (Mark I) was a bigger,
faster version of the Heath Robinson and read about five thousand characters per second. Colossus had approximately fifteen
hundred vacuum tubes, which was the largest number that had
ever been used at that time. Although Turing and Wynn-Williams
were not directly involved with the design of the Colossus, their
previous work on the Heath Robinson was crucial to the project,
since the first Colossus was based on the Heath Robinson.
Colossus became operational at Bletchley Park in December,
1943, and Flowers made arrangements for the manufacture of its
components in case other machines were required. The request for
additional machines came in March, 1944. The second Colossus, the
Mark II, was extensively redesigned and was able to read twentyfive
thousand characters per second because it was capable of performing
parallel operations (carrying out several different operations
at once, instead of one at a time); it also had a short-term
memory. The Mark II went into operation on June 1, 1944. More
machines were made, each with further modifications, until there
were ten. The Colossus machines were special-purpose, programcontrolled
electronic digital computers, the only known electronic
programmable computers in existence in 1944. The use of electronics
allowed for a tremendous increase in the internal speed of the
machine.
Impact
The Colossus machines gave Britain the best codebreaking machines
of World War II and provided information that was crucial
for the Allied victory. The information decoded by Colossus, the actual
messages, and their influence on military decisions would remain
classified for decades after the war.
The later work of several of the people involved with the Bletchley
Park projects was important in British computer development
after the war. Newman’s and Turing’s postwar careers were closely
tied to emerging computer advances. Newman, who was interested
in the impact of computers on mathematics, received a grant from
the Royal Society in 1946 to establish a calculating machine laboratory
at Manchester University. He was also involved with postwar
computer growth in Britain.
Several other members of the Bletchley Park team, including Turing, joined Newman at Manchester in 1948. Before going to Manchester
University, however, Turing joined Britain’s National Physical
Laboratory (NPL). At NPL, Turing worked on an advanced
computer known as the Pilot Automatic Computing Engine (Pilot
ACE). While at NPL, Turing proposed the concept of a stored program,
which was a controversial but extremely important idea in
computing. A“stored” program is one that remains in residence inside
the computer, making it possible for a particular program and
data to be fed through an input device simultaneously. (The Heath
Robinson and Colossus machines were limited by utilizing separate
input tapes, one for the program and one for the data to be analyzed.)
Turing was among the first to explain the stored-program
concept in print. He was also among the first to imagine how subroutines
could be included in a program. (Asubroutine allows separate
tasks within a large program to be done in distinct modules; in
effect, it is a detour within a program. After the completion of the
subroutine, the main program takes control again.)
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