Henry Scovil: Difference between revisions

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== Biography  ==
{{Biography
 
|Image=Henry Scovil.jpg
|Birthdate=1923
|Birthplace=Victoria, BC, Canada
|Death date=2010/05/11
|Associated organizations=[[Bell Labs]]
|Fields of study=Masers
|Awards=[[IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award]]; Stuart Ballantine Medal
}}
Dr. Henry Evelyn Derrick Scovil was born in 1923 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. He is recognized most widely for his contributions to the formation and development of the applied usage of bubble memory and solid-state masers.  
Dr. Henry Evelyn Derrick Scovil was born in 1923 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. He is recognized most widely for his contributions to the formation and development of the applied usage of bubble memory and solid-state masers.  


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[[Category:Computers_and_information_processing]]
[[Category:Computing and electronics]]
[[Category:Memory]]
[[Category:Memory]]
[[Category:Lasers,_lighting_&_electrooptics]]
[[Category:Lasers,_lighting_&_electrooptics]]

Latest revision as of 17:53, 1 October 2018

Henry Scovil
Henry Scovil
Birthdate
1923
Birthplace
Victoria, BC, Canada
Death date
2010/05/11
Associated organizations
Bell Labs
Fields of study
Masers
Awards
IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award, Stuart Ballantine Medal

Biography

Dr. Henry Evelyn Derrick Scovil was born in 1923 in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. He is recognized most widely for his contributions to the formation and development of the applied usage of bubble memory and solid-state masers.

Scovil earned his D.Phil from the University of Oxford in 1951. He then joined Bell Laboratories. Here, he worked with George Fahrer and H. Seidel to create the first turnable, solid state maser. In the late 1950s, Scovil helped construct ruby travelling wave masers which, at that time, were the lowest-noise microwave amplifiers in the world.

Scovil's work with masers and bubble memory has been recognized by the Franklin Institute (1972 Stuart Ballantine Medal), and the IEEE (1975 IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award). Scovil authored or co-authored several technical papers and in 1978, he was elected to the National Academy of Engineering. Scovil passed away on May 11, 2010 in Port Townsend, Washington.