David Richardson Medal

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The David Richardson Medal is awarded by the Optical Society (formerly the Optical Society of America) to recognize 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 that became the world's leader in diffraction gratings. The lab, which was renamed for him in 1966,[2] has since 2004 belonged to the Newport Corporation.

Recipients

Year Recipient
2023 Turan Erdogan
2022 Jim Tatum
2021 Majid Ebrahim-Zadeh
2020 G. Michael Morris
2019 Frederick J. Leonberger
2018 Steve Frisken
2017 John Canning
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[3]
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

See also

References

  1. ^ "David Richardson Medal". OSA.org. The Optical Society. 2013. Retrieved December 18, 2013.
  2. ^ "Personalia". Journal of the Optical Society of America. 56 (7): 992–993. 1966. doi:10.1364/JOSA.56.0990_1.
  3. ^ "OSA Recognizes Contributions to Optics". Physics Today. 52 (7). AIP Publishing: 68. 1999. doi:10.1063/1.2802804. ISSN 0031-9228.