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Gene F Franklin

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Citizenship
  
American

Fields
  
Control theory

Role
  
University Professor

Name
  
Gene Franklin


Gene F. Franklin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
July 25, 1927 Banner Elk, North Carolina (
1927-07-25
)

Died
  
August 9, 2012, Palo Alto, California, United States

Notable awards
  
Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award

Books
  
Feedback control of dynamic, Digital control of dynamic, Feedback Controls of Dynamic, MATLAB & Simulink Student V, Feedback Control of Dynamic

Similar People
  
Robert H Bishop, Bernard Widrow, Norman Abramson, Abbas El Gamal

Residence
  
United States of America

Gene F. Franklin (July 25, 1927 – August 9, 2012) was an American electrical engineer and control theorist who is known for his pioneering work towards the advancement of the control systems engineering– a subfield in the electrical engineering. Most of his work on control theory was adapted immediately into the NASA's U.S. space program, most famously in the control systems for the Apollo missions to the moon in 1960s–70s.

He is also noted for his authorship of influential texts on the control system, most notably, the Feedback Control of Dynamic Systems which has been translated into number of languages and has received literary prizes as the best book in the discipline of controls.

Biography

Gene F. Franklin was born in Banner Elk in North Carolina, United States on July 25, 1927. His father was a professor of mathematics at the local college and his mother was a nurse, an RN at the local hospital. He joined United States Navy in 1945, only to be served in the World War II, and was assigned to Navy's radar systems. He lost his enthusiasm for Navy after President Truman's decision of atomic bombings of Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He took transfer to study electronics and taught course on electronics at the Great Lakes Naval Training Center. He took discharge from the Navy on medical grounds and joined Georgia Institute of Technology.

He received his B.S. degree in Electrical engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1950, his M.S. in Electrical Engineering from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1952, and his D.E. Sc. degree from Columbia University in 1955. Franklin's 1958 doctoral thesis “Sampled-Data Control Systems” (co-authored by Franklin's dissertation advisor, John R. Ragazzini) introduced digital control to a discipline which had previously operated almost exclusively in the analog domain. This breakthrough allowed control systems to become much more precise and reliable.

He taught at Columbia University from 1955 to 1957 before moving to Stanford University, where he was professor emeritus of electrical engineering until his death in August 2012. His research encompassed all aspects of control incorporating digital logic, including adaptive control of both nonlinear systems and systems with multiple-data sampling. He was a recipient of the Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award in 2005 for "fundamental contributions to the theory and practice of digital, modern, adaptive, and multivariable control". On August 9, 2012, he died at Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto at the age of 85.

References

Gene F. Franklin Wikipedia