Tesla free energy meme shockingly short on truth (2024)

A Facebook post (archived here) claims visionary inventor Nikola Tesla found the secret to free energy and was about to give it to the world as a gift when the US government put a stop to it by destroying his Wardenclyffe tower project.

However, this claim distorts the purpose of Tesla’s work, with experts telling AAP FactCheck there is no such thing as “free energy” and he never experimented with electricity generation.

Tesla’s intention for Wardenclyffe tower was to create a way to transmit electricity wirelessly, but he was unable to prove it at a mass scale and eventually was forced to abandon the project as his debts piled up.

The post on the Nikola Tesla facts and quotes Facebook page reads: “On July 4, 1917, Nikola Tesla’s Wardenclyffe tower on Long Island, New York, was demolished by the federal government when they found out he was planning to give the world FREE ENERGY as a gift. They censored Tesla using the newspapers they controlled.

“He was one of the most important inventors of all the time (sic), and they never taught you about him in schools and this is solely because they don’t want you digging about Free energy.”

Tesla free energy meme shockingly short on truth (1)

Born in present day Croatia in 1856, Tesla studied engineering and physics, impressing his teachers with his eidetic memory and obsessive curiosity.

He garnered wealth and acclaim in the US for developing an electric polyphase motor that ran on alternating current, a format of electricity preferred to direct current for its superior ability to transmit power over long distances.

But his experiments in wireless electricity transmission proved less fruitful.

In 1901, he began planning the Wardenclyffe tower in Long Island, New York, with $US150,000 in funding from financier J. P. Morgan.

The impressive structure was completed in 1905 and consisted of a 55-ton steel hemisphere atop a 57-metre tall wooden lattice tower which rose out of a red brick laboratory Tesla intended for electrical experiments.

However, science history expert Professor Iwan Morus, from Aberystwyth University in Wales, says Tesla never planned to create free energy with the tower.

“Wardenclyffe was designed to transmit energy, not generate it,” Prof Morus told AAP FactCheck in an email.

“Tesla’s idea was that he would be able to transmit energy through the Earth and that it could be recovered at any point on the surface where there was another receiver. The electricity for all this was generated conventionally – so steam-powered dynamos.”

Prof Morus said the US government didn’t demolish the tower but it was instead sold off to help pay Tesla’s numerous debts, “particularly his extravagant hotel bills”.

Dr Branimir Jovanović, deputy director of the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade, agreed and told AAP FactCheck via email that “regarding ‘free’ energy, Tesla never used that expression”.

Dr Jovanović said the project was aimed at developing wireless transfer of energy, not about the production of free energy.

Dr Deepak Mishra, an electrical engineering researcher at UNSW Sydney, told AAP FactCheck: “No, there is nothing as ‘free energy’ in the literal sense.”

While wireless electricity transmission is possible, as proved by commercial use cases available today such as wireless phone chargers, Tesla was never able to prove the technology at the large scale he envisaged.

Wireless transmission suffers from low efficiency compared to wired transmission lines and requires stringent coupling conditions to be met, Dr Mishra said in an email.

In other words, the amount of electricity lost into the atmosphere by Tesla’s tower was too significant to be an effective means of energy transfer.

Tesla free energy meme shockingly short on truth (2)

Tesla is regarded as a revolutionary thinker and one of the outstanding minds of his time but the mythology he helped create sometimes obscured the reality of the man, according to Prof Morus.

“That image of the inventor as the eccentric outsider that he helped create is just as important (as his polyphase motor),” he said in a 2020 interview with Physics Today.

“It’s a powerful, seductive, and insidious image that still haunts the way we think about science and technology today. It feeds the view that scientific and technological advancements come from the inspiration of powerful and iconoclastic individuals rather than the hard work of many.”

Tesla-related misinformation abounds on social media and AAP FactCheck has debunked other false claims about him here and here.

The Verdict

The claim Nikola Tesla’s Wardenclyffe tower was destroyed by the US government to prevent his gift of “free energy” is false. Tesla never intended on creating free energy but was instead attempting to invent wireless transmission of electricity. Wardenclyffe tower was sold off to pay for Tesla’s debts.

False – The claim is inaccurate.

* AAP FactCheck is an accredited member of the International Fact-Checking Network. To keep up with our latest fact checks, follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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Tesla free energy meme shockingly short on truth (2024)

FAQs

Why did Tesla's free energy fail? ›

The way Tesla's wireless power worked was in many ways similar to an electrical storm. The air becomes charged with electricity, and because air is a conductor, it can cause arcs of electricity. This means that if Tesla had been successful at Wardenclyffe, his method would likely have caused airships to explode!

Does free energy really exist? ›

Free Energy is a Self-fulfilling Proposition if a Specific Set of Conditions are Met. These conditions are: that the voltage peaks and troughs of oscillations and the current peaks and troughs are in opposition to each other for most of the time.

Did Tesla discover infinite energy? ›

Free energy proponents claim that Tesla developed a system (the Wardenclyffe Tower) that could generate unlimited energy for free. However, his system was only intended to transmit energy for free; the system's energy would still need to be generated through conventional means.

What was the theory of the Wardenclyffe Tower? ›

He theorized from these experiments that if he injected electric current into the Earth at just the right frequency he could harness what he believed was the planet's own electrical charge and cause it to resonate at a frequency that would be amplified in "standing waves" that could be tapped anywhere on the planet to ...

Why is no one buying Tesla's? ›

EV sales growth has slowed in part because most of the options are more expensive than the average car purchase in the US, or so the theory goes.

Why don't we use Tesla's wireless electricity? ›

Tesla's wireless power distribution method had significant technical hurdles - it did not exactly work very well! The “power transmission” could not reach very far, was incredibly unsafe, and could have killed people pretty darn easily.

What is the closest thing to free energy? ›

The Closest Thing to Free Energy: Renewable Energy.

Why is free energy impossible? ›

According to the first law, the energy of an isolated system is constant—it is neither created nor destroyed—so it is not possible to extract more from a system than it consumes without additional input.

Is the free energy principle true? ›

The free energy principle is a mathematical principle of information physics: much like the principle of maximum entropy or the principle of least action, it is true on mathematical grounds.

What did Einstein think of Tesla? ›

Albert Einstein had a great deal of respect for Nikola Tesla and his contributions to science and technology. In a 1931 interview with the magazine "The New York Times," Einstein described Tesla as "a poet of science" and praised his inventions and insights into the nature of the universe.

What was the lost invention of Tesla? ›

Here are Tesla's suppressed inventions economically published all in one place in clear English and 42 illustrations. Disk turbine, Tesla coil, high-frequency lighting, magnifying transmitter, radio, wireless power, free-energy receiver. The only systematic intro to Tesla technology.

Did Nikola Tesla have a wife? ›

Tesla's acquaintances found his passion for pigeons puzzling because the inventor was a well-known germophobe. Tesla never married, but he admitted to falling in love with a very special white pigeon that visited him regularly. He reportedly said, “I loved that pigeon as a man loves a woman, and she loved me.

Where is Nikola Tesla buried? ›

Tesla died in New York on January 7, 1943. His body was interred in New York's Ferncliff Cemetery before being cremated in March of the same year. An urn with Tesla's ashes was taken to Belgrade in 1957. Tesla's ashes today rest in an urn in the shape of a sphere.

Did Nikola Tesla have children? ›

Nikola Tesla never wed or had kids because he felt that his masculinity had helped him develop his knowledge of science. The remains of Nikola Tesla are preserved at the Nikola Tesla Museum in Belgrade, Serbia, Europe. Copyright was handed to Tesla in 1888 for his induction motor that ran on alternating current (AC).

Is Tesla's tower still standing? ›

The original brick building, designed by Stanford White, is still standing, although there is considerable damage to the structure of the roof, steel girders, chimney, cupola, and a portion of a wall.

Why free energy doesn t work? ›

You can't create energy without consuming work or external energy into a system. In this system too, energy will be converted from one form to another, and a little bit of energy will be wasted within the conversion process (Practically).

What was Nikola Tesla's failed experiment? ›

Yes, a very early one, in 1886 when he first had his own lab: Tesla attempted to create a thermo-magnetic generator. Inventor of Human Software Engineering and studied genius for over 20 years. This tower was intended to transmit AC Power over large distances. Unfortunately it did not work.

Why is Tesla in free fall? ›

Tesla shares plummeted the most since 2020 after the electric vehicle maker reported weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings and another drop in automotive revenue.

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