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This IEEE-level award, which honors Charles Proteus Steinmetz, was created in 1979 by the board of directors of the IEEE and sponsored by the IEEE Standards Association. [1] The award is given only to individual recipients (not groups or multiple individuals in a single year).
Charles Proteus Steinmetz (born Karl August Rudolph Steinmetz; April 9, 1865 – October 26, 1923) was an American mathematician and electrical engineer and professor at Union College. He fostered the development of alternating current that made possible the expansion of the electric power industry in the United States, formulating mathematical ...
The Charles Proteus Steinmetz Memorial Lecture is a series of academic lectures initiated in 1925 [1] in honor of celebrated mathematician and electrical engineer Charles Proteus Steinmetz. To date seventy four addresses have been given on subjects ranging from peace [ 2 ] and educational reform [ 3 ] to nanotechnology [ 4 ] and solar ...
Through its awards program, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers recognizes contributions that advance the fields of interest to the IEEE. For nearly a century, the IEEE Awards Program has paid tribute to technical professionals whose exceptional achievements and outstanding contributions have made a lasting impact on technology, society and the engineering profession.
Mathematics genius and electrical engineering pioneer Charles P. Steinmetz was the first recipient of the honor's silver medal. The award is administered on behalf of the foundation by the KTH - Royal Institute of Technology, [1] one of Europe's leading technical and engineering universities. [2]
IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award: 1979 Charles Proteus Steinmetz: Q5970305: Whitley Award: Australian science award 1979 Gilbert Percy Whitley: Australia: Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales: Q7996552: Herbert P. Broida Prize: APS award in spectroscopy or chemical physics 1979 Herbert P. Broida: American Physical Society: Q15815186
Founded in 1900 by Thomas Edison, Willis R. Whitney, and Charles Steinmetz, this lab defined industrial research for years to come. Elihu Thomson, one of the founding members of the laboratory, summed up the goal of the lab saying, "It does seem to me therefore that a Company as large as the General Electric Company, should not fail to continue investing and developing in new fields: there ...
A great amount of work was undertaken in the United States as part of the War Training Program in the areas of radio direction finding, pulsed linear networks, frequency modulation, vacuum tube circuits, transmission line theory and fundamentals of electromagnetic engineering. These studies were published shortly after the war in what became ...