- Oliver Ellsworth Buckley
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Oliver Ellsworth Buckley
Born August 8, 1887
Sloan, IowaDied December 14, 1959 (aged 72)
Newark, New JerseyResidence United States Nationality American Fields Electrical engineering Notable awards IEEE Edison Medal Oliver Ellsworth Buckley (August 8, 1887 in Sloan, Iowa - December 14, 1959 in Newark, New Jersey) was an American electrical engineer known for his contributions to the field of submarine telephony.
Biography
He received the IEEE Edison Medal for "contributions to the science and art which have made possible a transatlantic telephone cable; for wise leadership of a great industrial laboratory; for outstanding services to the government of his country".
Buckley, along with his colleagues at AT&T H. D. Arnold and Gustav Elmen (the discoverer of permalloy), is responsible c.1915 for a method of constructing submarine cable using permalloy tape wrapped around the copper conductors. This construction greatly improves the loading performance of the cable.[1]
The Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Prize is named in his honor.
References
- ^ Huurdeman, AA, The worldwide history of telecommunications, p314, Wiley-IEEE, 2003
External links
IEEE Edison Medal 1951–1975 Charles F. Wagner (1951) · Vladimir K. Zworykin (1952) · John F. Peters (1953) · Oliver E. Buckley (1954) · Leonid A. Umansky (1955) · Comfort A. Adams (1956) · John K. Hodnette (1957) · Charles F. Kettering (1958) · James F. Fairman (1959) · Harold S. Osborne (1960) · William B. Kouwenhoven (1961) · Alexander C. Monteith (1962) · John R. Pierce (1963) · Walker Lee Cisler (1965) · Wilmer L. Barrow (1966) · George Harold Brown (1967) · Charles F. Avila (1968) · Hendrik Wade Bode (1969) · Howard H. Aiken (1970) · John Wistar Simpson (1971) · William Hayward Pickering (1972) · Bernard D. H. Tellegen (1973) · Jan A. Rajchman (1974) · Sidney Darlington (1975)
Categories:- IEEE Edison Medal recipients
- Scientists at Bell Labs
- American inventors
- American electrical engineers
- 1887 births
- 1959 deaths
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