IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award

IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award
Awarded for Exceptional contributions to the development and/or advancement of standards in electrical and electronics engineering
Sponsored by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
First awarded 1979
Official website IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award

The IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award is a technical field award given to an individual by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), for major contributions to standardization within the field of electrical and electronics engineering. This IEEE-level award, which honors Charles Proteus Steinmetz, was created in 1979 by the Board of Directors of the IEEE and sponsored by the IEEE Standards Association.[1]

The award is given only to individual recipients (not groups or multiple individuals in a single year).

Recipients of this award receive a bronze medal, a certificate, and an honorarium.[1]

Recipients

The following people have received the IEEE Charles Proteus Steinmetz Award:[2]

  • 2016: Hermann Koch
  • 2015: Steven Mills
  • 2014: Mark Mcgranaghan
  • 2013: Mohindar Sachdev
  • 2012: Daleep C. Mohla
  • 2011: James W. Moore
  • 2010: Richard Deblasio
  • 2009: James Thomas Carlo
  • 2008: Roy Billinton
  • 2007: Vic Hayes
  • 2006: Steven Mark Halpin
  • 2005: Wallace S. Read
  • 2004: Julian Forster
  • 2003: Donald C. Loughry
  • 2002: Ben C. Johnson
  • 2001: Stanley Baron
  • 2000: Hiroshi Yasuda
  • 1999: Dennis Bodson
  • 1998: William J. McNutt
  • 1997: L. John Rankine
  • 1997: Donald N. Heirman
  • 1996: Marco W. Migliaro
  • 1995: L. Bruce McClung
  • 1994: Clayton H. Griffin
  • 1993: Ivan G. Easton
  • 1992: Donald C. Fleckenstein
  • 1991: Fletcher J. Buckley
  • 1990: Warren H. Cook
  • 1989: Joseph L. Koepfinger
  • 1988: No Award
  • 1987: Bruce B. Barrow
  • 1986: Chester H. Page
  • 1985: Charles L. Wagner
  • 1984: H. Baron Whitaker
  • 1983: William A. McAdams
  • 1982: Ralph M. Showers
  • 1981: No Award
  • 1980: Leon Podolsky

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.