List of NYU Tandon School of Engineering people
The following is a partial list of notable NYU Tandon School of Engineering alumni, and current and former faculty. Also see List of New York University alumni.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
Notable faculty
- Stephen Arnold
- Boris Aronov, Sloan Research Fellow
- Dan Bailey – fly-shop owner, innovative fly developer and staunch Western conservationist
- Barouh Berkovits - invented the cardiac defibrillator and artificial cardiac pacemaker[1]
- Maureen Braziel
- George Bugliarello - Chairman of the Board of Science and Technology for International Development of the National Academy of Sciences; of the National Medal of Technology Nomination Evaluation Committee; and of the National Academy of Engineering Council’s International Affairs Committee
- Charles Camarda
- Justin Cappos - Professor in the department of Computer Science and Engineering; data-security software developer
- Ju-Chin Chu – Chemical engineer and father of Steven Chu. He became a Academia Sinica member in 1964.
- Edwin F. Church – namesake of Edwin F. Church Medal
- John Colagioia - creator of programming language Thue
- Francis Crick – co-discoverer of DNA structure; awarded Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine
- Paul M. Doty – emeritus Harvard Mallinckrodt Professor of Biochemistry; specialized in the physical properties of macromolecules; involved in peace and security policy issues
- R. Luke DuBois – composer, performer, conceptual new media artist, programmer, record producer, pedagogue
- Paul Peter Ewald – inventor of X-ray diffraction method for determination of molecular structure; Physics Department chair until 1957
- Leopold B. Felsen
- Antonio Ferri - leader of a team that created the first practical hypersonic tunnel heater, used to heat air for dischage into a wind tunnel[2]
- R. M. Foster – Bell Labs mathematician whose work was of significance regarding electronic filters for use on telephone lines.
- Herbert Freeman
- Eugene D. Genovese – historian of the American South and slavery
- Gordon Gould – former Polytechnic professor; inventor of the laser
- David and Gregory Chudnovsky – mathematicians who held the record for number of digits of pi in 1989; now run the Institute for Mathematics and Advanced Supercomputing at Polytechnic
- Leslie Greengard[3]
- S. L. Greitzer – mathematician; founding chairman of the US Mathematical Olympiad; publisher of the pre-college mathematics journal Arbelos
- Charles William Hanko – historian and politician
- David Harker – physicist; X-ray crystallographer; discoverer of the Donnay-Harker law and Harker-Kasper inequalities
- Paul Horn[4]
- Jerry MacArthur Hultin
- Katherine Isbister
- Myles Jackson
- Andrew Kalotay
- Maurice Karnaugh – inventor of Karnaugh Maps (K-Maps) while at Bell Labs; professor at the Westchester campus 1980-1999; retired
- Edward Kimbark – power engineer
- Parke Kolbe
- Joseph Wood Krutch – writer, critic, and naturalist
- Erich E. Kunhardt
- Yann LeCun[3]
- Paul Levinson – author of The Plot To Save Socrates; media commentator on The O'Reilly Factor; Visiting Professor at the Philosophy and Technology Study Center at Polytechnic, 1987–1988
- Frederick B. Llewellyn – electrical engineer
- Rudolph Marcus – former Polytechnic professor; Nobel Prize in chemistry; National Medal of Science winner.
- Nathan Marcuvitz – electrical engineering pioneer
- Herman F. Mark – founder of the Polymer Research Institute; National Medal of Science winner.
- Phil Maymin - Assistant Professor of Finance and Risk Engineering; Libertarian Party House candidate in Connecticut
- Warren L. McCabe - American chemical engineer and is considered as one of the founding fathers of the profession of chemical engineering
- David Miller
- Elliott Waters Montroll – scientist and mathematician
- Samuel Morse – co-inventor of the Morse code; contributor to the invention of a single-wire telegraph system based on European telegraphs
- J. H. Mulligan, Jr. – namesake of IEEE James H. Mulligan, Jr. Education Medal
- Tsuneo Nakahara
- Donald Othmer – co-author of Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology; inventor of the Othmer Still, a laboratory device for vapor-liquid equilibrium measurements
- Charles G. Overberger
- Athanasios Papoulis – pioneer in the field of stochastic processes
- Leonard Peikoff – former philosophy professor; founder of the Ayn Rand Institute
- David J. Pine[5]
- John R. Ragazzini
- Theodore Rappaport
- John Howard Raymond
- Hans Reissner – German aeronautical engineer
- Keith W. Ross - Computer science professor
- Murray Rothbard – former economics professor; key figure in libertarian movement
- Michael Shelley – Professor of Mechanical Engineering
- Samuel Sheldon - IEEE president[6]
- Joshua W. Sill – Professor of Mathematics; became the youngest General in the Civil War; namesake of Fort Sill
- Aleksandra Smiljanić
- Joel B. Snyder - IEEE president
- K. R. Sreenivasan
- Torsten Suel – pioneer of search engine algorithms
- Jerome Swartz - developed early optical strategies for barcode scanning technologies
- Nassim Nicholas Taleb – epistemologist author of The Black Swan; works in the risk engineering department
- James Tenney – composer; music theorist
- John G. Truxal
- Ernst Weber – founder of the Microwave Research Institute; first IEEE President; National Medal of Science winner.
- Jack Keil Wolf – researcher in information theory and coding theory; Guggenheim fellow
- Ta-You Wu – nuclear physicist; President of Academia Sinica
- Dante C. Youla – namesake of Youla–Kucera parametrization in control theory
- Louis Zukofsky – second-generation American modernist poet
- David Lefer
- Robert Ubell
- Beth Simone Noveck
Notable alumni
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See also
- List of New York University alumni
- List of New York University faculty
- List of university and college mergers in the United States
References
- 1 2 http://www.hrsonline.org/News/ep-history/notable-figures/barouhberkovits.cfm
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 http://archive.poly.edu/poly_ebriefs/archives/Feb03.htm
- 1 2 http://www.poly.edu/academics/departments/electrical/people
- ↑ http://www.poly.edu/academics/departments/technology/people
- ↑ http://engineering.nyu.edu/people/david-pine
- ↑ http://ethw.org/Samuel_Sheldon
- ↑ http://www.nytimes.com/1990/04/18/obituaries/benjamin-adler-86-an-early-advocate-of-uhf-television.html
- ↑ "Gertrude B. Elion". Nndb.com. Retrieved 2012-02-01.
- ↑ http://archive.poly.edu/poly_ebriefs/archives/Feb03.htm
- ↑ http://www.bths.edu/apps/news/show_news.jsp?REC_ID=237613&id=35
- ↑ Research with Impact Inno/Vention Competition PolyThinking (2010-03-03). "Polythinking Gallery: Gilbert". Poly.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-01.
- ↑ http://www.poly.edu/news/2012/02/14/knowledge-power-peter-jordan-value-education
- ↑ Polythinking Gallery: Kelly (will not display unless JavaScript is disabled)
- ↑ Research with Impact Inno/Vention Competition PolyThinking (2010-03-03). "Polythinking Gallery: Owades". Poly.edu. Retrieved 2012-02-01.
- ↑ "American College of Surgeons: Division of Member Services: History and Archives: Online Resources: Highlight of the Month". Qualifiedsurgeons.org. 2008-07-29. Retrieved 2012-02-01.
- ↑ http://www.iac.gatech.edu/people/faculty/wood
- ↑ http://www.govtech.com/pcio/Leonard-M-Pomata-Named.html
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