Zap! : Nikola Tesla takes charge

Titre
Zap! : Nikola Tesla takes charge

Monica, Kulling

Sommaire
Growing up in Smiljan, Croatia, Nikola Tesla dreamed about harnessing the power of Niagara Falls. In 1884, he walked down the gangplank into the New York Harbor with four cents in his pocket, a book of poems, a drawing of a flying machine, and a letter of introduction to Thomas Edison, the "electrical wizard" of America. Upon meeting, Edison sent Tesla to fix the SS Oregon as a test and was so astounded that he offered Tesla a job at his factory. Tesla and Edison had different views about electricity; Tesla wanted to develop an alternate current while Edison wanted to stick to the direct current system. Edison offered Tesla a large sum to make his direct current system more efficient, but when the work was done, Edison refused to pay. Tesla quit and when things were looking bleak, he met George Westinghouse, who also thought that alternating current was the way to light up America. He gave Tesla a job and in 1896, Tesla and Westinghouse built a generator at Niagara Falls that was able to send power as far as Buffalo, New York.

Nikola Tesla takes charge

Date de publication comme intervalle
2016

Great idea series

Description matérielle
32 unnumbered pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm.

Informations sur le programme
Accelerated Reader LG

Vedette-matière - nom de personne
Tesla, Nikola, 1856-1943.
 
Edison, Thomas A. (Thomas Alva), 1847-1931.

Terme de vedette-matière
Inventors -- United States -- Biography.

Vedette secondaire auteur
Slavin, Bill,

Résumé
Growing up in Smiljan, Croatia, Nikola Tesla dreamed about harnessing the power of Niagara Falls. In 1884, he walked down the gangplank into the New York Harbor with four cents in his pocket, a book of poems, a drawing of a flying machine, and a letter of introduction to Thomas Edison, the "electrical wizard" of America. Upon meeting, Edison sent Tesla to fix the SS Oregon as a test and was so astounded that he offered Tesla a job at his factory. Tesla and Edison had different views about electricity; Tesla wanted to develop an alternate current while Edison wanted to stick to the direct current system. Edison offered Tesla a large sum to make his direct current system more efficient, but when the work was done, Edison refused to pay. Tesla quit and when things were looking bleak, he met George Westinghouse, who also thought that alternating current was the way to light up America. He gave Tesla a job and in 1896, Tesla and Westinghouse built a generator at Niagara Falls that was able to send power as far as Buffalo, New York.

Numéro international normalisé des livres (ISBN)
9781770495227

Informations de publication
Toronto : Tundra Books, [2016]
 
©2016


BibliothèqueNuméro de rayonType de documentCode à barres du documentStatut
Bisset621 KULBook30276000383315Non-Fiction