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Electricity powers our world.
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And we harness it through electrical engineering, the field that focuses on the application of electricity and electromagnetism in our everyday lives.
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Just as you have blood pumping through your veins, machines and systems often need electrical power flowing through their wires to work.
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It's the lifeblood of our society.
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And it's hard to imagine society today without three of the main branches of electrical engineering:
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telecommunications, power and lighting; and computer engineering.
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They each came about in their own way, with their own challenges and victories, their own heroes and sometimes villains.
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And you'd be surprised how much death is involved in the history of electrical engineering.
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Well, it can be dangerous.
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[Theme Music]
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Electrical engineering deals with the properties of electricity and magnetism.
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So it stands to reason that the field didn't really exist until we knew what those things were.
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No one had a very good understanding of electromagnetism
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until English physicist William Gilbert released his principal work, De Magnete, or “On the Magnet”, back in 1600.
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After years of experimentation, he found that the needle of a compass points north-south and dips downwards because the Earth is basically a giant magnet.
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He was the first to describe the phenomena we now associate with electrical attraction and magnetic poles,
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which is why many view him as the father of electrical studies.
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Now, electrical conduction – which is the movement of electrically charged particles through a transmission medium –
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wasn't discovered until around 1729, by a British scientist – Stephen Gray.
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He discovered it while doing experiments in which he connected a glass tube to various objects, like an ivory ball or a piece of cork, by wire or string.
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When he rubbed the glass tube, creating friction, he found the object at the other end of the line would be electrified.
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With the age of discovery and colonization upon the world, could Gray's work be used to produce a faster means of communication?
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This brings us to the start of the first field of electrical engineering: telecommunication.
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Efforts to communicate over long distances, by things like semaphore, were undertaken as early as the 1700s.
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But it wasn't until 1837 that Sir William Fothergill Cooke and Charles Wheatstone patented the first electric telegraph.
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Their design used five or six magnetic needles to sway right or left to indicate specific letters.
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This early model was a little impractical because of its cost, but the men later patented a new version that only used one magnetic needle.
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Their invention was clearly a neat idea.
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But it didn't really take off, until it was used to solve a murder that sounds like it was lifted from the pages of a Sherlock Holmes novel.
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On New Year's Day 1845, a man named John Tawell gave a woman he was seeing a fatal dose of poison.
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As the poison set in, she started to scream, which alerted the neighbors.
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And Tawell ran off in a panic, thinking he escaped the law as he boarded a train from Slough to London.
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But his escape was foiled by technology.
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His description was sent by telegraph to London, where Tawell was arrested and later tried and hanged.
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It's a rather gruesome way to make an invention popular, but it spread the story of the electric telegraph nonetheless.
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Around the same time as all of this was happening, Samuel Morse was making his own developments in the United States.
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He figured out how to use an electromagnet with a pen, so that when the electromagnet was energized, the pen made a mark on paper.
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In 1838, he developed a system of dots and dashes, now known as Morse code, so that messages could be easily transmitted.
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By 1844, he had obtained financial support from Congress and built the first telegraph line in the United States.
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It travelled between Baltimore and Washington, and on May 24th, he sent the line's first message, “What hath God wrought.”
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Pretty ominous, if I do say so myself.
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About 20 years later, in 1866, the British ship Great Eastern succeeded in laying the first permanent telegraph line across the Atlantic Ocean.
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Before it, large bodies of water were a big obstacle for means of telecommunication.
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After the transatlantic telegraph line, some engineers began to realize that by fluctuating an electric current, they could induce different sound vibrations.
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It made them wonder, if they could manipulate sound vibrations,
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could they input a sound on one end of a telegraph line and replicate the same sound on the other end?
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Could they capture the human voice?
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By 1876, they did just that, with the invention of the telephone.
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A few different minds came up with similar ideas at the same time, but Alexander Graham Bell was the first to get the patent.
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He was able to use a fluctuating current to vary the magnetism in the coil of an electromagnet, which caused a small piece of iron to vibrate on a diaphragm.
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This replicated the vibration that had initially sent the fluctuation, which reproduced the initial sound.
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Now you could call talk to people who were far away, but you still needed telephone lines and a phone with a physical connection to them.
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But that changed when Heinrich Hertz discovered electromagnetic waves around 1887.
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It was soon realized that these waves could carry a signal by modifying their wavelength, amplitude, and frequency.
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This led to the radio, and the never-ending confusion over who gets credit for inventing it.
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Now, after World War I, electrical engineers manipulated these signals and found that along with the conversion of light to electrical impulses,
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they could create a visual broadcast: television.
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Since then, we've taken these signals even further.
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With the internet and wifi, we've developed nearly instant, wireless communication around the world.
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But electrical engineering is far more than telecommunication.
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We have electrical engineering to thank for supplying power and light.
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In 1801, Sir Humphry Davy discovered that he could produce a brilliant spark, or arc, between two carbon rods in a battery circuit.
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This is called arc lighting.
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Davy's battery wasn't powerful enough to produce a stable arc.
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So arc lighting wasn't commercially feasible until the 1870's,
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after Belgian-born engineer Zénobe-Théophile Gramme developed a generator that could support a higher power capacity.
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It was called the Gramme dynamo, a continuous-current electrical generator that drove the push for electrical power.
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While arc lighting began showing up on streets around the world, Thomas Edison realized that arc lighting was too bright to be used in the home.
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This led to his development of the incandescent lamp.
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By capitalizing on the work of many others,
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his incandescent lighting systems were soon featured at popular exhibits such as the Paris Lighting Exhibition in 1881 and the Crystal Palace in London.
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But Edison quickly gained competition, most notably from George Westinghouse and Nikola Tesla.
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This led to what's now remembered as the War of Currents,
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with Westinghouse and Tesla as proponents of an alternating, or AC, current against Edison's direct, or DC, current.
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Edison did his best to discredit AC currents by trying to convince the public they were dangerous.
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He had animals electrocuted by AC currents on public display, and even recommended electrocution as a death-penalty alternative to hanging prisoners.
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At which he succeeded.
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The first person to be executed by electricity was a convicted murderer named William Kemmler, who was put to death in the electric chair in 1890.
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Despite his other efforts, though, Edison failed to discredit the push for AC.
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Westinghouse won the contract to supply electricity to the 1893 World's fair in Chicago, and AC currents have since become dominant in the electric power industry.
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We also have electrical engineering to thank for many of the electronic devices we use every day.
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That brings us to the third field of electrical engineering: computers.
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In their beginning, before World War II, most computers were part of what was called “radio engineering”.
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Most of the computer's focus was on radar, radio, and early television.
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Their primary work was in processing the signals of those devices.
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Computers only began to gain a broader audience after the transistor was developed in 1947.
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The point-contact transistor was a semiconductor device that could amplify or switch electrical signals.
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It allowed electrical engineers to replace vacuum tubes, which were bulky, unstable, and consumed too much power.
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But while the computers could be smaller, they were still pretty large.
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They also needed a separate integrated chip for each one of their functions.
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Then, in 1968, American engineer Marcian Hoff helped solve these problems.
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He conceived of a universal processor that could be used by all computers.
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His work led to the Intel 4004, the world's first commercial microprocessor.
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Since microprocessors were so tiny, the computers themselves could be even smaller.
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And, that's how electrical engineers shaped the world we live in today: with telecommunications, electric power and lighting, and computers.
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The fact is, it takes all three of these fields – none of which existed until a couple hundred years ago – to work together, for you to watch me right now.
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So today we explored the history of each of these fields, touching on such topics as magnetism, electrical conduction, telegraphy, lighting, and computers.
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Crash Course Engineering is produced in association with PBS Digital Studios.
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You can head over to their channel to check out a playlist of their amazing shows, like Brain Craft, Global Weirding with Katharine Hayhoe, and Hot Mess.
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Crash Course is a Complexly production and this episode was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl C. Kinney Studio with the help of these wonderful people.
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And our amazing graphics team is Thought Cafe.