English: Prototype
arc converter (Poulsen arc) radio transmitter, built by Danish electrical engineer
Valdemar Poulsen in 1903. One of the first continuous wave
radio transmitters, it was used in the first AM broadcasting stations until the early 1920s, when it was superseded by
vacuum tube transmitters. It consists of a DC electric arc in a chamber filled with either hydrogen or other hydrocarbon gas
(center) between the poles of an
electromagnet (horizontal cylinders front and back). The anode
(right) is water-cooled, the cathode is made of carbon and is rotated continuously
(mechanism, rear). The arc is connected to a series
resonant circuit (not shown) consisting of a capacitor and inductor, which in turn is connected to a wire antenna. The
negative resistance of the arc cancels the positive resistance inherent in the resonant circuit, exciting continuous sinusoidal oscillating currents in the resonant circuit, which are radiated by the antenna as radio waves. The arc oscillator was actually invented by
Elihu Thomson in 1892, but the frequency of his device was limited to about 10 kHz. By operating it in a hydrogen atmosphere with a cooled anode, Poulsen was able to raise the
frequency into the longwave radio range so it could be used for a radio transmitter.