IEEE Heinrich Hertz Medal

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 physicist Heinrich 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 of electromagnetic field theory.

*1990: John D. Kraus (Ohio State University, United States) for pioneering work in radio astronomy and the development of the helical 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 of Hertzian waves through the atmosphere, ionosphere and the Earth, 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-assisted tomography.

*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 of lightning 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 by lightning, thus discovering the Earth's magnetosphere.

*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 of wave propagation and scattering 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


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Heinrich Hertz — Infobox Scientist name = Heinrich Rudolf Hertz image width = 230px birth date = birth date|1857|2|22|mf=y birth place = Hamburg, Germany residence = Germany nationality = German death date = death date and age|1894|1|1|1857|2|22|mf=y death place …   Wikipedia

  • Hertz (disambiguation) — Hertz may refer to:* Hertz, the SI unit of frequency (cycles per second) ** 2600 hertz, the frequency that AT T formerly put as a steady signal on any long distance telephone line that was not currently in use * Hertz (crater), a lunar crater… …   Wikipedia

  • Heinrich Welker — Heinrich Johann Welker (* 9. September 1912 in Ingolstadt; † 25. Dezember 1981 in Erlangen) war ein bedeutender deutscher Physiker, insbesondere auf dem Gebiet der Halbleitertechnik. Seine bahnbrechendste Entdeckung waren III V Verbindungen (aus… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • John D. Kraus — Born June 28, 1910(1910 06 28) Ann Arbor, Michigan Died July 18, 2004(2004 07 18) (aged 94) …   Wikipedia

  • Nathan Marcuvitz — was professor emeritus Polytechnic Institute of NY Born December 29 …   Wikipedia

  • Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers — Infobox Non profit Non profit name = Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Non profit Non profit type = Professional Organization founded date = January 1, 1963 founder = location = origins = Merger of the American Institute of… …   Wikipedia

  • James R. Wait — was an electrical engineer and engineering physicist. BiographyWait was born in Ottawa, Canada, on January 23, 1924, received his BS (1948) and MS (1949) in engineering physics and his PhD (1951) in electrical engineering, all from the University …   Wikipedia

  • Ronald N. Bracewell — Infobox Scientist name = Ronald N. Bracewell box width = image width = caption = birth date = Birth date|1921|07|22 birth place = Sydney, New South Wales, Australia death date = Death date and age|2007|08|12|1921|07|22 death place = Stanford,… …   Wikipedia

  • Martin A. Uman — Martin Allan Uman (born 1936) is an American engineer. He has been acknowledged by the American Geophysical Union as one of the world s leading authorities on lightning. [1] Uman is probably best known for his work in lightning modeling, which is …   Wikipedia

  • Leopold B. Felsen — (born in Munich in 1924; died in the US September 24, 2005) was a physicist known for studies of Electromagnetism and wave based disciplines. He had to flee Germany at 16 due to the Nazis. [ [http://www.nytimes.com/2005/10/10/science/10felsen.html… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”