- IEEE Heinrich Hertz Medal
The IEEE Heinrich Hertz Medal is a science award presented by the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers for outstanding achievements in the field of electromagnetic waves. The medal is named in honour of German physicistHeinrich Hertz , and was first proposed in 1986 by IEEE Region 8 (Germany ) as a centennial recognition of Hertz's work on electromagnetic radiation theory from 1886 to 1891. The medal was first awarded in 1988, and was presented annually until 2001.Recipients
*1988:
Hans-Georg Unger (Technical University at Brunswick ,Germany ) for outstanding merits in radio-frequency science, particularly the theory of dielectric wave guides and their application in modern wide-band communication.*1989:
Nathan Marcuvitz (Polytechnic University of New York ,United States ) for fundamental theoretical and experimental contributions to the engineering formulation ofelectromagnetic field theory.*1990:
John D. Kraus (Ohio State University ,United States ) for pioneering work inradio astronomy and the development of thehelical antenna and the corner reflector antenna.*1991:
Leopold B. Felsen (Polytechnic University of New York ,United States ) for highly original and significant developments in the theories of propagation,diffraction and dispersion of electromagnetic waves.*1992:
James R. Wait (University of Arizona ,United States ) for fundamental contributions to electromagnetic theory, to the study of propagation ofHertzian wave s through the atmosphere,ionosphere and theEarth , and to their applications in communications, navigation and geophysical exploration.*1993:
Kenneth Budden (Cavendish Laboratory ,University of Cambridge ,United Kingdom ) for major original contributions to the theory of electromagnetic waves in ionized media with applications to terrestrial and space communications.*1994:
Ronald N. Bracewell (Stanford University ,United States ) for pioneering work in antenna aperture synthesis and image reconstruction as applied to radioastronomy and to computer-assistedtomography .*1995:
Jean Van Bladel (Ghent University ,Belgium ) for major contributions in fundamental electromagnetic theory and its application to electrical engineering.*1996:
Martin A. Uman (University of Florida ,United States ) for outstanding contributions to the understanding oflightning electromagnetics and its application to lightning detection and protection.*1997:
Owen Storey (Stanford University ,United States ) for discovering the field-aligned paths of Hertzian-wave whistlers generated bylightning , thus discovering the Earth'smagnetosphere .*1998:
Chen To Tai (University of Michigan ,United States ) for outstanding contributions to electromagnetic and antenna theory and the development and application of Green's dyadics.*1999:
Akira Ishimaru (University of Washington ,United States ) or fundamental contributions to the theories and applications ofwave propagation andscattering in random media and backscattering enhancement.*2000:
Arthur A. Oliner (Polytechnic University of New York ,United States ) for contributions to the theory of guided waves and antennas.*2001:
Adrianus de Hoop (Delft University of Technology ,Netherlands ) for fundamental contributions to the theory of reciprocity and to the understanding of electromagnetic wave propagation layered in media.External links
* [http://www.ieee.org/portal/pages/about/awards/sums/hertzsum.html IEEE Heinrich Hertz Medal] ,
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
* [http://www.ieee.org/portal/pages/about/awards/pr/hertzpr.html Recipients of the IEEE Heinrich Hertz Medal] ,Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
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