Yuichi Ninomiya: Difference between revisions

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== Biography  ==
{{Biography
 
|Death date=2000/07
|Associated organizations=NHK
|Fields of study=[[Television]]
}}
At NHK, Dr. Yuichi Ninomiya pioneered the multiple Sub-Nyquist Sampling Encoding (MUSE)system, a band compression technology. It was used to transmit the world’s first HDTV broadcasts via satellite in Japan. Dr. Ninomiya was a member of the IEEE, the Institute of Television Engineering (ITE) of Japan and the Institute of Electronics and Communication Engineers (IECE), Japan.
At NHK, Dr. Yuichi Ninomiya pioneered the multiple Sub-Nyquist Sampling Encoding (MUSE)system, a band compression technology. It was used to transmit the world’s first HDTV broadcasts via satellite in Japan. Dr. Ninomiya was a member of the IEEE, the Institute of Television Engineering (ITE) of Japan and the Institute of Electronics and Communication Engineers (IECE), Japan.


He held 176 patents and published about 35 papers. Dr. Ninomiya passed away in July 2000.
He held 176 patents and published about 35 papers. Dr. Ninomiya passed away in July 2000.


[[Category:TV]]
[[Category:TV]]  
[[Category:Consumer_electronics]]
[[Category:Consumer electronics]]
 
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ninomiya}}

Latest revision as of 20:26, 9 March 2016

Yuichi Ninomiya
Death date
2000/07
Associated organizations
NHK
Fields of study
Television

Biography

At NHK, Dr. Yuichi Ninomiya pioneered the multiple Sub-Nyquist Sampling Encoding (MUSE)system, a band compression technology. It was used to transmit the world’s first HDTV broadcasts via satellite in Japan. Dr. Ninomiya was a member of the IEEE, the Institute of Television Engineering (ITE) of Japan and the Institute of Electronics and Communication Engineers (IECE), Japan.

He held 176 patents and published about 35 papers. Dr. Ninomiya passed away in July 2000.