- Alexander Lodygin
Alexander Nikolayevich Lodygin (
October 18 1847 –March 16 1923 ) ("Александр Николаевич Лодыгин" in Russian) was a Russian electrical engineer andinventor , one of inventors of theIncandescent light bulb .Alexander Nikolayevich Lodygin was born in village "Stenshino"',
Tambov guberniya ,Russia . His parents were of a very old and noble family (descendants ofAndrei Kobyla likeRomanov s), but of very moderate means. He studied at the TambovCadet School (1859-1865). Then he served in the "71st Belev regiment", and in 1866-1868 studied at the Moscow Infantry School. Soon after graduation from his military school he retired from the military and worked as a worker at the Tula weapons factory.In 1872 he decided to go to
Saint Petersburg to attend lectures at Saint Petersburg Institute of Technology and to start working on an "electrical helicopter" ("electrolet"). The electrical helicopter would need some sort of artificial lighting that would have to be electrical. He decided to start his helicopter work by developing a source of electrical light for it.On
July 11 ,1874 , Lodygin was granted Russianpatent number 1619 (which he applied for in 1872) for his filament lamp. He also patented this invention inAustria , Britain,France , andBelgium . For a filament, Lodygin used a very thincarbon rod, placed under a bell-glass. In August of 1873 he demonstrated prototypes of his electric filament lamp in the physics lecture hall of the Saint Petersburg Institute of Technology. In 1873–1874 he conducted experiments with electric lighting on ships, city streets, etc. In 1874, the Petersburg Academy of Sciences awarded him with aLomonosov Prize for his invention of the filament lamp. That same year, Lodygin established “Electric Lighting Company, A.N. Lodygin and Co”. In 1899,Petersburg Institute of Electrical Engineering awarded Lodygin with the honorary title of electrical engineer.From 1875 he became very interested in the
socialist ideas of theNarodnik s. In the 1880s after Narodniks killed EmperorAlexander II of Russia , there were repressions against their organization. Thus, in 1884 he had to emigrate from Russia toFrance andUSA . In 1895 he married German reporter Alma Schmidt, the daughter of an electrical engineer.In the 1890s, Lodygin invented a few types of filament lamps with metallic filaments; some say he was the first scientist to use a
tungsten filament.Fact|date=April 2008 He got a patent for lamps with tungsten filaments and sold it toGeneral Electric (1906),Fact|date=April 2008 who began the first industrial production of such lamps.In 1907 Lodygin returned to Russia. He continued work on a series of his inventions, including a new type of electrical motor, electrical
weld ing, tungsten alloys, electricaloven s andsmelting furnace s. He taught at Petersburg Institute of Electrical Engineering and worked for the Petersburg railroad. In 1914 he was sent by the Ministry of Agriculture to develop plans for electrification ofOlonets andNizhny Novgorod gubernias.After the
Russian Revolution of 1917 Lodygin emigrated toUSA . He declined aSoviet offer to work for theirState Plan for Electrification of Russia (1918). He died inBrooklyn in 1923.Lodygin's ideas were almost always ahead of his time. He invented an
incandescent light bulb beforeEdison , but it was not commercially profitable. The lamp with a tungsten filament is indeed the only design used now, but in 1906 they were too expensive. His diving apparatus is very similar to modern scuba equipment. Even his ideas for an electrical helicopter were used many years later byIgor Sikorsky .External links
* [http://www.tambov.org/i/FrontShowPublicationItem/rubric26/id124 Site of Lodygin's museum in Tambov]
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