Charles Concordia: Difference between revisions
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== | {{Biography | ||
|Image=Charles Concordia 2401.jpg | |||
|Birthdate=1908/07/20 | |||
|Death date=2003/12/25 | |||
== | |Associated organizations=[[General Electric (GE)]] | ||
|Fields of study=Power | |||
Charles Concordia was born on 20 July 1908 and grew up in Schenectady, NY. | |Awards=[[IEEE Lamme Medal]]; Centennial Medal; Philip Sporn Award; [[IEEE Medal of Honor]] | ||
}} | |||
Charles Concordia was born on 20 July 1908 and grew up in Schenectady, NY. He was an excellent student and went straight from high school to work at the [[General Electric (GE)|General Electric Company]]. Although he continued his studies part time at Union College in these early years, he earned his first degree, an (honorary) D.Sc. from the college, in 1971; and later received an honorary D.Sc. from Iowa State University. | |||
== Career at General Electric == | == Career at General Electric == | ||
During his first few years at GE, Concordia worked on early television research, and then joined the company’s ‘test program’, an advanced engineering course, graduating in 1934. His work gravitated to systems engineering and electric utility, and he became G.E.'s consultant to public utilities, advising on system protection and reliability. During World War II, he worked on [[Generators|generators]] and turbines for naval destroyer propulsion, researched superchargers for airplanes, and helped develop ships' electrical drives. In the 1940s, he chaired [[AIEE History 1884-1963|AIEE's]] subcommittee on large-scale computing devices and continued his consulting work after the war. He retired from G.E. in 1973 and continued independent consulting for clients such as Westinghouse and power companies in Taiwan and Hong Kong. He also served on the Advisory Panel to the Federal Power Commission as it dealt with the after-effects of two blackouts and served internationally as a blackout consultant. | |||
== | == Accomplishments == | ||
His accomplishments made him | His accomplishments made him well-known as a power systems engineer and and in the expanding field of planning, operation and security of extended power systems. His theory of electric machines and his work on the dynamic analysis of interconnected electric power systems, electrical machinery, and automatic control systems all made significant contributions. In the 1940s, he pioneered the idea that synchronous machines' voltage-regulator characteristics affect their stability. In 1951. he wrote ''Synchronous Machines -Theory and Performance,'' which became a well-known text. By the end of his career he had accumulated six patents and published over 130 papers. | ||
== Professional Organizations and Awards == | == Professional Organizations and Awards == | ||
A Fellow of the IEEE, ASME, and AAAS, Dr. Concordia | A [[IEEE Fellow Grade History|Fellow]] of the [[IEEE History|IEEE]], ASME, and AAAS, Dr. Concordia was a member of the NAE and NSPE. He was Chairman of the IEEE Research and Transfers Committee, as well as a member of the IEEE Publications and [[IEEE Spectrum|Spectrum]] Editorial Boards, and the Power System Engineering Committee. He helped start and then chaired the first committee on computing devices at the AIEE. He was Chairman of the International Study Committee on Power System Planning and Operation of the International Conference on Large Electric Power Systems (CIGRE) for nine years, and was a founder and National Treasurer of the Association for Computing Machinery. | ||
Among the many awards bestowed upon him by the IEEE and the | Among the many awards bestowed upon him by the IEEE and the AIEE are the [[IEEE Lamme Medal|Lamme Medal]], the Centennial Medal, and the Power-Life Award. He also won the [[Philip Sporn|Philip Sporn]] Award from CIGRE and both the Coffin Award and the [[Charles Proteus Steinmetz|Steinmetz]] Award from the General Electric Company. He is the recipient of the 1999 [[IEEE Medal of Honor|IEEE Medal of Honor]] "For outstanding contributions in the area of Power Systems Dynamics which resulted in substantial improvements in planning, operation, and security of extended power systems". He was named as an Eminent Member of [[Eta Kappa Nu]] in 2001. | ||
Concordia died on 25 December 2003, in Venice, FL. | Concordia died on 25 December 2003, in Venice, FL. | ||
== Further Research == | == Further Research == | ||
[[Oral-History:Charles Concordia|Charles Concordia Oral History]] | |||
[http://www.edisonexploratorium.org/bio/concordia.htm Bio from Edison Exploratorium] | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Concordia}} | |||
[[Category: | [[Category:Energy]] | ||
[[Category:Inspection, safety & security]] | |||
[[Category:Power system reliability & stability]] |
Latest revision as of 00:22, 27 July 2018
- Birthdate
- 1908/07/20
- Death date
- 2003/12/25
- Associated organizations
- General Electric (GE)
- Fields of study
- Power
- Awards
- IEEE Lamme Medal, Centennial Medal, Philip Sporn Award, IEEE Medal of Honor
Biography
Charles Concordia was born on 20 July 1908 and grew up in Schenectady, NY. He was an excellent student and went straight from high school to work at the General Electric Company. Although he continued his studies part time at Union College in these early years, he earned his first degree, an (honorary) D.Sc. from the college, in 1971; and later received an honorary D.Sc. from Iowa State University.
Career at General Electric
During his first few years at GE, Concordia worked on early television research, and then joined the company’s ‘test program’, an advanced engineering course, graduating in 1934. His work gravitated to systems engineering and electric utility, and he became G.E.'s consultant to public utilities, advising on system protection and reliability. During World War II, he worked on generators and turbines for naval destroyer propulsion, researched superchargers for airplanes, and helped develop ships' electrical drives. In the 1940s, he chaired AIEE's subcommittee on large-scale computing devices and continued his consulting work after the war. He retired from G.E. in 1973 and continued independent consulting for clients such as Westinghouse and power companies in Taiwan and Hong Kong. He also served on the Advisory Panel to the Federal Power Commission as it dealt with the after-effects of two blackouts and served internationally as a blackout consultant.
Accomplishments
His accomplishments made him well-known as a power systems engineer and and in the expanding field of planning, operation and security of extended power systems. His theory of electric machines and his work on the dynamic analysis of interconnected electric power systems, electrical machinery, and automatic control systems all made significant contributions. In the 1940s, he pioneered the idea that synchronous machines' voltage-regulator characteristics affect their stability. In 1951. he wrote Synchronous Machines -Theory and Performance, which became a well-known text. By the end of his career he had accumulated six patents and published over 130 papers.
Professional Organizations and Awards
A Fellow of the IEEE, ASME, and AAAS, Dr. Concordia was a member of the NAE and NSPE. He was Chairman of the IEEE Research and Transfers Committee, as well as a member of the IEEE Publications and Spectrum Editorial Boards, and the Power System Engineering Committee. He helped start and then chaired the first committee on computing devices at the AIEE. He was Chairman of the International Study Committee on Power System Planning and Operation of the International Conference on Large Electric Power Systems (CIGRE) for nine years, and was a founder and National Treasurer of the Association for Computing Machinery.
Among the many awards bestowed upon him by the IEEE and the AIEE are the Lamme Medal, the Centennial Medal, and the Power-Life Award. He also won the Philip Sporn Award from CIGRE and both the Coffin Award and the Steinmetz Award from the General Electric Company. He is the recipient of the 1999 IEEE Medal of Honor "For outstanding contributions in the area of Power Systems Dynamics which resulted in substantial improvements in planning, operation, and security of extended power systems". He was named as an Eminent Member of Eta Kappa Nu in 2001.
Concordia died on 25 December 2003, in Venice, FL.