Ernst Adolph Guillemin | |
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Born | May 8, 1898 Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
Died | April 1, 1970 | (aged 71)
Nationality | United States |
Institutions | Massachusetts Institute of Technology |
Alma mater | Ludwig-Maximilians University, MIT, University of Wisconsin-Madison |
Doctoral advisor | Arnold Sommerfeld |
Doctoral students | Robert Fano Thomas Stockham William Linvill |
Notable awards | IRE Medal of Honor |
Ernst Adolph Guillemin (May 8, 1898 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin – April 1, 1970) was an American electrical engineer and computer scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who spent his career extending the art and science of linear network analysis and synthesis.
Guillemin was born in 1898, in Milwaukee, and received his B.S. (1922) and S.M. (1924) degrees in electrical engineering from the University of Wisconsin–Madison and MIT, respectively. He then attended the University of Munich, under Arnold Sommerfeld, on a Saltonstall Traveling Fellowship. He was granted his doctorate in 1926,[1] whereupon he returned to MIT as an instructor, becoming Assistant Professor in 1928, Associate Professor in 1936, and Professor in Electrical Communications in 1944. In 1960, he was appointed to the MIT Edwin Sibley Webster Chair of Electrical Engineering, a title he held until his retirement in 1963.[2][3]
On the invitation of Edward L. Bowles in 1928, Guillemin was invited to assist in the development of a communications option for undergraduate students. In this effort, he revised and expanded a subject that included communication transmission lines, telephone repeaters, balancing networks, and filter theory. Thus began his life-long career of developing and refining linear, lumped, finite, passive, and bilateral networks in the sphere of teaching.[3]
Guillemin was appointed consultant to the Microwave Committee of the National Defense Research Committee in 1940. As such, he spent about half of his time consulting with groups in the MIT Radiation Laboratory. He took over administrative responsibility of the Communications Option in the MIT Department of Electrical Engineering, in 1941.[2]
During his career, Guillemin influenced many undergraduate and graduate students who went on to contribute greatly in industry and academia; included in the list are his graduate students Robert Fano and Thomas Stockham.[4] His professional contributions were recognized internationally with numerous honors and awards.[2][3]
Ernst A. Guillemin has written several books:
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