Sneha Girap (Editor)

Edward Ginzton

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Nationality
  
American

Institutions
  
Stanford University

Fields
  
Electrical engineering


Name
  
Edward Ginzton

Books
  
Microwave Measurements

Role
  
Physicist

Awards
  
IEEE Medal of Honor

Born
  
December 27, 1915 Yekaterinoslav, Russian Empire (now Ukraine) (
1915-12-27
)

Alma mater
  
University of California, Berkeley; Stanford University

Notable awards
  
IEEE Medal of Honor (1969)

Died
  
August 13, 1998, Stanford, California, United States

Education
  
Stanford University, University of California, Berkeley

Residence
  
United States of America

Dr Edward Leonard Ginzton (December 27, 1915 – August 13, 1998) was a Ukrainian-American engineer.

Contents

Education

Ginzton completed his B.S. (1936) and M.S. (1937) in Electrical Engineering at the University of California, Berkeley and his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering from Stanford University in 1941.

Career

As a student at Stanford University, Ginzton worked with William Hansen and brothers Russell and Sigurd Varian. In 1941 he became a member of the Varian-Hansen group at the Sperry Gyroscope Company.

Ginzton was appointed Assistant Professor in Physics at Stanford University in 1945 and remained on the faculty until 1961.

In 1949, Ginzton and Marvin Chodorow developed the 1 BeV 220 accelerator in the at Stanford University. After completion of the 1 BeV 220 accelerator, Ginzton became director of the Microwave Laboratory which was later renamed the Ginzton Laboratory.

Ginzton, along with Russell and Sigurd Varian, was one of the original board members of Varian Associates, founded in 1948. The nine initial directors of the company were Ginzton, Russell, Sigurd and Dorothy Varian, H. Myrl Stearns, Stanford University faculty members William Webster Hansen and Leonard I. Schiff, legal counsel Richard M. Leonard, and patent attorney Paul B. Hunter.

Ginzton became CEO and chairman of Varian Associates after Russell Varian died of a heart attack and Sigurd Varian died in a plane crash.

Ginzton was awarded the IEEE Medal of Honor in 1969 for "his outstanding contributions in advancing the technology of high power klystrons and their application, especially to linear particle accelerators."

Ginzton was a member of the National Academy of Engineering and in the National Academy of Sciences.

Family

Ginzton was born in Ukraine and lived in China before moving to California in 1929.

On June 16, 1939, Ginzton and Artemas Alma McCann (1913–2000) married. Artemas was the daughter of James Arthur and Alma (Hawes) McCann. The Ginztons had four children: Anne Ginzton Cottrell (1942), Leonard Edward Ginzton (1943), Nancy Hader Ginzton (1946), and David Edward Ginzton (1948).

References

Edward Ginzton Wikipedia