Background
González Camarena was born into a family composed by Arturo González and Sara Camarena, originally from Arandas, Jalisco.
González Camarena was born into a family composed by Arturo González and Sara Camarena, originally from Arandas, Jalisco.
In 1939 he graduated from the Escuela Superior de Ingenería Mecánica y Eléctrica (School of Mechanical and Electrical Engineers, Escuela Superior de Ingeniería Mecánica y Eléctrica) at the Instituto Politécnico Nacional (National Polytechnic Institute, National Polytechnic Institute). He obtained his first radio license two years later.
Born in Guadalajara in 1917, his family moved to Mexico City when Guillermo was almost 2 years old. As a boy he made electrically propelled toys, and at the age of twelve built his first amateur radio. González Camarena invented the "Chromoscopic adapter for television equipment", an early color television transmission system.
He was only 17.
A United States. patent application (2,296,019) states, "My invention relates to the transmission and reception of colored pictures or images by wire or wireless.." The invention was designed to be easy to adapt to black-and-white television equipment. González Camarena applied for this patent August 14, 1941, and obtained the patent September 15, 1942. He also filed for additional patents for color television systems in 1960 and 1962.
On August 31, 1946, González Camarena sent his first color transmission from his lab in the offices of The Mexican League of Radio Experiments, at Lucerna Saint #1, in Mexico City.
The video signal was transmitted at a frequency of 115 MHz. and the audio in the 40 meter band. He obtained authorization to make the first publicly announced color broadcast in Mexico, on February 8, 1963, Paraíso Infantil, on Mexico City"s XHGC-television, a station that he established in 1952.
By that time, the government had adopted NTSC as the television color system. He died in a car accident in Puebla on April 18, 1965, returning from inspecting a television transmitter in Las Lajas, Veracruz.
A field-sequential color television system similar to his Tricolor system was used in National Aeronautics and Space Administration"s Voyager mission in 1979, to take pictures and video of Jupiter.
In 1995, a Mexican science research and technology group created Louisiana Fundación Guillermo González Camarena (The Guillermo González Camarena Foundation), which benefits creative and talented inventors in Mexico. At the same time, the National Polytechnic Institute began construction on the Centro de Propiedad Intelectual "Guillermo Gonzalez Camarena" (Guillermo González Camarena Intellectual Property Center).
He was also an avid stargazer. He built his own telescope and became a regular member of the Astronomical Society of Mexico.