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In 1881 Tesla went to Budapest as an engineer for a telephone company and a year later took up a similar position in Paris. He went to the United States in 1884 and worked for American inventor Thomas Edison for a year before setting up his own workshop. For much of his time in the United States, Tesla worked with American industrialist George Westinghouse, who bought and successfully developed Tesla's patents, leading to the introduction of alternating current for power transmission. Tesla became a United States citizen in 1889. After his mothers death in 1892, he became increasingly withdrawn and eccentric. In 1912 both he and Edison were proposed for the Nobel Prize in physics, but Tesla refused to be associated with Edison, who he believed had conducted an unscrupulous campaign for the adoption of direct current. Neither inventor received the prize. Tesla neglected to patent many of his discoveries and made little profit from them. He lived his last years as a recluse and died in New York.
TESLAS WORK

Tesla built his first working induction motor in 1883. He found that he could raise little interest in his inventions in Europe. He set off for New York City, where he set up his own laboratory and workshop in 1887 to develop his motor in a practical way. Only months later he applied for and was granted a complicated set of patents covering the generation, transmission, and use of alternating current electricity. Because alternating current can be transmitted over much greater distances than direct current, it provides the power for most of our present-day machines. At about the same time he lectured to the American Institute of Electrical Engineers on his alternating current system. After learning about the talk, George Westinghouse quickly bought Tesla's patents.
Westinghouse backed Tesla's ideas and, as a demonstration, employed his system for lighting at the 1893 World Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Months later Westinghouse won the contract to generate electricity at Niagara Falls, New York. He used Tesla's system to supply electricity to local industries and deliver alternating current to the town of Buffalo, New York, 35 km (22 mi) distant.
After 1888 Tesla's interests turned to alternating currents at very high frequencies, or alternating currents that vary very rapidly over time. He felt these currents might be useful for lighting and for communication. First, he modified generators so that they produced high frequency current. He then decided that generating current at a lower frequency, then boosting it to a higher frequency would be more efficient. With that in mind, he designed the Tesla coil, a transformer that could change both the frequency and magnitude of an alternating current.
The Tesla coil is a combination of two circuits. Each circuit has a coil of wire, both wound together around a hollow tube. One of the coils is made of heavy wire and has just a few turns around the tube. The other circuits coil is made of finer wire wound many times around the tube. When an alternating current passes through the coil of heavy wire, it produces a magnetic field. The magnetic field induces current in the fine wire. Because of the differences in the wire and number of turns, the frequency of the current in the finer coil is much higher, and the voltage is also higher in the finer coil. Using this device, Tesla produced an electric spark 41 m (135 ft) long in 1899. He also lit more than 200 lamps over a distance of 40 km (25 mi) without the use of intervening wires. The high-frequency current of a large Tesla coil can energize the gas in lamps made of gas-filled tubes (such as neon lamps) from a long distance.
Tesla was also very interested in the possibility of radio communication. As early as 1897, he demonstrated remote control of two model boats on the lake in Madison Square Garden in New York City. In 1900 he began to construct a broadcasting station on Long Island in the hope of developing a project called World Wireless. By the early part of the next decade this project had proved too expensive for his backers and was abandoned. By the beginning of World War I (1914-1918) Tesla faced financial ruin. Westinghouse refused to provide Tesla with financial support after several significant failures, including the broadcasting station. Another major benefactor, American financier John Pierpont Morgan, died in 1913. Tesla spent the remainder of his life in seclusion. Many of his ideas have come to fruition at the hands of others. Tesla outlined a scheme for detecting ships at sea that was later developed as radar. Many of his inventions, including electrical clocks and turbines, remained in his head because he had no money to put them into practice.
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