David Richardson Medal
The David Richardson Medal is awarded by the Optical Society of America to recognize significant contributions to optical engineering, primarily in the commercial and industrial sector.[1] The award was first made in 1966, to its namesake David J. Richardson. He received it for distinctive contributions to the ruling and replicating of gratings, used to determine the transfer functions of lenses. There is a prize associated with the medal.
Richardson received a graduate degree in spectroscopy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the mid 1930s. He was hired by Bausch and Lomb in 1947 to establish a grating and scale-ruling laboratory. With time, this laboratory became the World's leader in diffraction gratings and in 1966 Bausch and Lomb named it the David Richardson Grating Laboratory.[2] Since 2004 this laboratory is owned by the Newport Corporation.
Recipients
Year | Recipient |
---|---|
2016 | Francisco J. Duarte |
2015 | Daniel R. Neal |
2014 | Jannick P. Rolland |
2012 | Gregory W. Forbes |
2011 | Jasbinder S. Sanghera |
2011 | Ishwar D. Aggarwal |
2010 | Kenneth E. Moore |
2009 | Eric Udd |
2008 | Kanti Jain |
2007 | James L. Fergason |
2006 | Gary S Duck |
2005 | John R. Sandercock |
2004 | Chungte W. Chen |
2003 | Roland V. Shack |
2002 | Arthur H. Guenther |
2001 | Huib Visser |
2000 | Achim J. Leistner |
1999 | Milan R. Kokta |
1998 | Yoshiharu Namba |
1997 | Brian H. Welham |
1996 | J. A. Dobrowolski |
1995 | Julian Stone |
1994 | David A. Markle |
1993 | John H. Bruning |
1992 | Ichiro Kitano |
1991 | Gary K. Starkweather |
1990 | Jean M. Bennett |
1989 | Erik W. Anthon |
1988 | Janusz S. Wilczynski |
1987 | John W. Evans |
1986 | John L. Plummer |
1985 | Norman John Brown |
1984 | Erwin G. Loewen |
1983 | Harold Osterberg |
1982 | Charles A. Burrus |
1981 | Abe Offner |
1980 | William T. Plummer |
1980 | Richard F. Weeks |
1979 | William P. Ewald |
1978 | Thomas James Johnson |
1977 | Walter P. Siegmund |
1976 | John McLeod |
1975 | Karl Lambrecht |
1974 | Roderic M. Scott |
1972 | William G. Fastie |
1971 | Frank Cooke |
1970 | Richard S. Hunter |
1969 | Howard Cary |
1968 | Harold E. Edgerton |
1967 | George A. Morton |
1966 | David J. Richardson |
References
- ↑ "David Richardson Medal". OSA.org. The Optical Society. 2013. Retrieved December 18, 2013.
- ↑ J. Opt. Soc. Am. 56, 992-993 (1966)