IEEE Medal of Honor
This article relies too much on references to primary sources. (June 2020) |
IEEE Medal of Honor | |
---|---|
Awarded for | Exceptional contribution or an extraordinary career in the IEEE fields of interest |
Presented by | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers |
First awarded | 1917 |
Website | IEEE Medal of Honor |
The IEEE Medal of Honor is the highest recognition of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). It has been awarded since 1917, when its first recipient was Major Edwin H. Armstrong. It is given for an exceptional contribution or an extraordinary career in the IEEE fields of interest. The award consists of a gold medal, bronze replica, certificate and honorarium. The Medal of Honor may only be awarded to an individual.
The medal was created by the Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE) as the IRE Medal of Honor. It became the IEEE Medal of Honor when IRE merged with the American Institute of Electrical Engineers (AIEE) to form the IEEE in 1963. It was decided that IRE's Medal of Honor would be presented as IEEE's highest award, while the Edison Medal would become IEEE's principal medal. Edward Field Sanford, Jr. designed the medal in 1917.
Eleven persons with an exceptional career in electrical engineering received both the IEEE Edison Medal and the IEEE Medal of Honor, namely Edwin Howard Armstrong, Ernst Alexanderson, Mihajlo Pupin, Arthur E. Kennelly, Vladimir K. Zworykin, John R. Pierce, Sidney Darlington, James L. Flanagan, Nick Holonyak, Robert H. Dennard, Dave Forney, and Kees Schouhamer Immink.[1]
Recipients[2][]
- 2021:
- 2021: Jacob Ziv
- 2020: Chenming Hu
- 2019: Kurt E. Petersen
- 2018: Bradford W. Parkinson
- 2017: Kornelis (Kees) A. Schouhamer Immink[3]
- 2016: G. David Forney, Jr.
- 2015: Mildred Dresselhaus
- 2014: B. Jayant Baliga[4]
- 2013: Irwin M. Jacobs[5]
- 2012: John L. Hennessy[6]
- 2011: Morris Chang
- 2010: Andrew Viterbi
- 2009: Robert H. Dennard
- 2008: Gordon Moore
- 2007: Thomas Kailath
- 2006: James D. Meindl
- 2005: James Flanagan
- 2004: Tadahiro Sekimoto
- 2003: Nick Holonyak
- 2002: Herbert Kroemer
- 2001: Herwig Kogelnik
- 2000: Andrew Grove
- 1999: Charles Concordia
- 1998: Donald Pederson
- 1997: George H. Heilmeier
- 1996: Robert Metcalfe
- 1995: Lotfi A. Zadeh
- 1994: Alfred Y. Cho
- 1993: Karl Johan Åström
- 1992: Amos E. Joel, Jr.
- 1991: Leo Esaki
- 1990: Robert G. Gallager
- 1989: C. Kumar Patel
- 1988: Calvin Quate
- 1987: Paul Lauterbur
- 1986: Jack Kilby
- 1985: John Roy Whinnery
- 1984: Norman F. Ramsey
- 1983: Nicolaas Bloembergen
- 1982: John Tukey
- 1981: Sidney Darlington
- 1980: William Shockley
- 1979: Richard Bellman
- 1978: Robert Noyce
- 1977: H. Earle Vaughan
- 1976: No Award
- 1975: John Robinson Pierce
- 1974:
- 1973: Rudolf Kompfner
- 1972: Jay W. Forrester
- 1971: John Bardeen
- 1970: Dennis Gabor
- 1969: Edward Ginzton
- 1968: Gordon K. Teal
- 1967: Charles H. Townes
- 1966: Claude Elwood Shannon
- 1965: No Award
- 1964: Harold A. Wheeler
- 1963: George C. Southworth
John Hays Hammond, Jr. - 1962: Edward Victor Appleton
- 1961: Ernst A. Guillemin
- 1960: Harry Nyquist
- 1959: Emory Leon Chaffee
- 1958: Albert Hull
- 1957: Julius Adams Stratton
- 1956: John V. L. Hogan
- 1955: Harald T. Friis
- 1954: William L. Everitt
- 1953: John M. Miller
- 1952: Walter R. G. Baker
- 1951: Vladimir Zworykin
- 1950: Frederick Terman
- 1949: Ralph Bown
- 1948: Lawrence C. F. Horle
- 1947: No Award
- 1946: Ralph Hartley
- 1945: Harold H. Beverage
- 1944: Haraden Pratt
- 1943: William Wilson
- 1942: Albert H. Taylor
- 1941: Alfred N. Goldsmith
- 1940: Lloyd Espenschied
- 1939: Albert G. Lee
- 1938: John H. Dellinger
- 1937: Melville Eastham
- 1936: George Ashley Campbell
- 1935: Balthasar van der Pol
- 1934: Stanford C. Hooper
- 1933: John Ambrose Fleming
- 1932: Arthur Edwin Kennelly
- 1931: Gustave A. Ferrie
- 1930: Peder Oluf Pedersen
- 1929: George W. Pierce
- 1928: Jonathan Zenneck
- 1927: Louis W. Austin
- 1926: Greenleaf W. Pickard
- 1925: No Award
- 1924: Michael I. Pupin
- 1923: John Stone Stone
- 1922: Lee De Forest
- 1921: Reginald A. Fessenden
- 1920: Guglielmo Marconi
- 1919: Ernst Alexanderson
- 1918: No Award
- 1917: Edwin H. Armstrong
See equivalent awards[]
Others[]
- List of engineering awards
- List of prizes named after people
References[]
- ^ "Origins of the IEEE Medal of Honor". IEEE. June 13, 2017. Retrieved June 13, 2017.
- ^ The List of IEEE Medal of Honor Recipients Archived 2015-04-22 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ 2017 IEEE Medals and recognitions recipients and citations (PDF, 46 kB); retrieved 30. November 2016.
- ^ "Recipients of the 2014 Medals and Awards". IEEE. February 14, 2014. Archived from the original on 2014-02-24. Retrieved April 24, 2014.
- ^ "IEEE Announces 2013 Medal and Recognition Honorees". IEEE. December 13, 2012. Retrieved February 7, 2013.
- ^ "Stanford President Hennessy wins IEEE's highest honor".
External links[]
- "IEEE Medal of Honor Recipients" (PDF). IEEE. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 22, 2015. Retrieved December 2, 2014.
- Academic awards
- Awards established in 1917
- IEEE Medal of Honor recipients
- IEEE medals
- Science award stubs