Karl Ferdinand Braun (June 6, 1850–April 20, 1918) was a German physicist.
During the development of radio, he also worked on wireless telegraphy. Around 1898, he invented a crystal rectifier. Guglielmo Marconi used Braun's patents (among others). Braun's British patent on tuning was used by Marconi in many of his tuning patents. Marconi would later admit to Braun himself that he had "borrowed" portions of Braun's work. In 1909 Braun shared the Nobel Prize for physics with Marconi for "contributions to the development of wireless telegraphy."
Braun went to the United States at the beginning of WWI to help defend the German wireless station at Sayville against attacks by the British Marconi Corporation. He died in his house in Brooklyn before the war ended in 1918.
Nobel Prize in Physics winners | German physicists | German inventors]] 1850 births | 1918 deaths
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