Adolf Karl Heinrich Slaby (April 18, 1849 — April 6, 1913) was a German wireless pioneer and the first Professor of electro-technology at the Technical University of Berlin (1886).
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Slaby was born in Berlin, the son of a bookbinder. He enrolled at the Berlin Trade Academy, the forerunner of Berlin-Charlottenburg Technical Academy to study mechanical engineering and mathematics under Franz Reuleaux. He was employed as an in-house instructor with the machine manufacturer Louis Schwartzkopff, leading to an interest in mechanical engineering. Slaby continued his studies at the University of Jena, and received his doctorate in mathematics.
Slaby taught mathematics and mechanics at the vocational school at Potsdam, where he conducted experiments on steam engines and petrol engines. He wrote his book Theorie der Gasmaschinen, which took an important place in the development of Internal combustion engines. Slaby also studied with Heinrich Hertz.[1]
Berlin was at that time the center of electro-technology, with Werner von Siemens in a leading position. Siemens supported Slaby personally in his private studies. Slaby performed his Habilitation at the Berlin Trade Academy in 1876, and lectured on electrical motors, electrical telegraphy, and Electromechanics. In 1883, he became a tenured professor of electro-technology.
In the meantime, the Charlottenburg Technical Academy had been renamed a university. There, Slaby developed a program of theoretical lectures connected with practical work. With the generous support of industry he established in 1844 an electro-technical laboratory,[2] making Berlin the most important training center for the recently-developed field of electro-technology.
As a result of his personal acquaintance with the head of the English telegraph administration, Sir William Henry Preece (1834–1917), from 1897 Slaby participated with the help of his assistant Georg von Arco from 1897 in Marconi's experiments with wireless telegraphy across the English Channel. He recognized immediately the meaning of this invention, and repeated the experiments in Berlin, leading to development of essential physical and technical concepts. The Emperor and the military authorities appeared very interested.
The wireless telegraphy - trials took place first at the Technical University of Berlin, and then between Church of the Redeemer, Sacrow and the 1.6 kilometers distant Marine station Kongsnaes at the Potsdamer Platz. On 7 October 1897, he established a 21-kilometer radio link between Schöneberg and Rangsdorf, a world record. The following summer, he established a link between Berlin to Jüterbog with the end-points being over 60 km apart. Crucial improvements led to the success, not of spark gap transmission antennas as used by Marconi, but in inductive antennas.[3]
Slaby and the German navy attempted to invade the Marconi station at Glace Bay, Newfoundland:
“The first day, it was the commander and thirty of his officers, demanding a look round. Vyvyan, the station manager, met them at the gate and told he'd be glad to show them over the place, as long as they could produce a letter of authority from Marconi or the company. Of course they didn't have one. The commander huffed and puffed and said that His Imperial Majesty would be much annoyed ... and they went off. The next day, however, they sent a mob of 150 sailors. They would have overrun the place if Vyvyan hadn't kept his head. He organized a defensive force of laborers to keep them out."[4][5]
Radio communications were also transmitted at several places, by Slaby at the AEG, by Marconi Wireless telegraph Co. and by Ferdinand Braun at Siemens & Halske. However Slaby's radiograms were rejected by a Marconi station, because the licensing forbade it. This untenable condition led to consolidation: in 1903 AEG and Siemens & Halske formed the "Gesellschaft für drahtlose Telegrafen m. b. H. System Telefunken, known as Telefunken.
Slaby became both chairman of Verein Deutscher Ingenieure and in 1893 the first chairmen of VDE, and had a personal audience with William II, German Emperor. Slaby gave lectures about technology in the Berlin Palace,and organized experimental lectures for the emperor at the TH Berlin. This accomplished the social recognition of engineers and the complete equal rights of the technical universities with the universities. Adolf Slaby became 1898 the first representative of a TH to be a lifetime member in Prussian Herrenhaus. In 1906, Slaby retired to emeritus status. His successor was Ernst Orlich, a representative of the classical mathematical treatment of the problems of the theoretical electro-technology. Slaby was then named chairman of the board for the Akademischer Verein Hütte (Association of Students) a position he held until January 18, 1912.