Joseph Slepian

Joseph Slepian
Born 11 February 1891
Boston, MA
Died 19 December 1969 (1969-12-20) (aged 78)
Institutions Cornell University
Alma mater Harvard University (B.Sc.) (1911)
Harvard University (M.Sc.) (1912)
Harvard University (Ph.D.) (1913)
Notable awards IEEE Edison Medal (1947)

Joseph Slepian (February 11, 1891 December 19, 1969)[1] was an American electrical engineer known for his contributions to the developments of electrical apparatus and theory.

Born in Boston, MA of Jewish Russian immigrants, he studied mathematics at Harvard University, from which he was awarded a B.Sc. (1911), a M.Sc. (1912) and Ph.D. on the thesis On the Functions of a Complex Variable Defined by an Ordinary Differential Equation of the First Order and First Degree advised by George Birkhoff (1913). Meanwhile, he also worked at Boston Elevated Railway.

After his Ph.D., he became Sheldon fellow at University of Göttingen in Germany, was at University of Sorbonne in Paris, before becoming instructor of mathematics at Cornell University (1915). He joined Westinghouse Electric in East Pittsburgh (1916) in the railway motor department initially, moving to the research department (1917) at Forest Hills (PA) where he became head (1922), consulting engineer (1926) and associate director (19381956) and developed over two hundred patents.[2] Slepian did significant groundwork for the betatron (1927). He received the IEEE Edison Medal (1947) for his work on the autovalve lightning arrester, deion circuit breaker, and ignitron.

He wrote over 120 articles and essays, and published the book Conductivity of electricity in gases (1933).[3] His career was somewhat shortened by a stroke (1951). He was the father of the mathematician David Slepian.

Awards

References

  1. biography
  2. biography from nap.edu
  3. David Slepian-Scientist, engineer and inventor from IEEE Industry Applications Magazine, November/December 2000

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.