Ronald Bracewell
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Ronald Newbold Bracewell AO (22 July 1921 – 12 August 2007) was the Lewis M. Terman Professor of Electrical Engineering of the Space, Telecommunications, and Radioscience Laboratory at Stanford University.


Education

Bracewell was born in Sydney, in 1921, and educated at
Sydney Boys High School , motto_translation = With Truth and Courage , established = , location = Cleveland Street, Moore Park, Sydney, New South Wales , country = Australia , coordinates = , pu ...
. He graduated from the
University of Sydney The University of Sydney (USYD), also known as Sydney University, or informally Sydney Uni, is a public research university located in Sydney, Australia. Founded in 1850, it is the oldest university in Australia and is one of the country's ...
in 1941 with the
BSc A Bachelor of Science (BS, BSc, SB, or ScB; from the Latin ') is a bachelor's degree awarded for programs that generally last three to five years. The first university to admit a student to the degree of Bachelor of Science was the University ...
degree in mathematics and physics, later receiving the degrees of
B.E. A Bachelor of Engineering (BEng) or a Bachelor of Science in Engineering (BSE) is an academic undergraduate degree awarded to a student after three to five years of studying engineering at an accredited college or university. In the UK, a Bache ...
(1943), and M.E. (1948) with
first class honours The British undergraduate degree classification system is a grading structure for undergraduate degrees or bachelor's degrees and integrated master's degrees in the United Kingdom. The system has been applied (sometimes with significant variati ...
, and while working in the Engineering Department became the President of the Oxometrical society. During
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
he designed and developed microwave radar equipment in the Radiophysics Laboratory of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, Sydney under the direction of Joseph L. Pawsey and Edward G. Bowen and from 1946 to 1949 was a research student at
Sidney Sussex College Sidney Sussex College (referred to informally as "Sidney") is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge in England. The College was founded in 1596 under the terms of the will of Frances Sidney, Countess of Sussex (1531–1589), wife ...
,
Cambridge Cambridge ( ) is a College town, university city and the county town in Cambridgeshire, England. It is located on the River Cam approximately north of London. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census, the population of Cambridge was 145,700. Cam ...
, engaged in
ionospheric The ionosphere () is the ionized part of the upper atmosphere of Earth, from about to above sea level, a region that includes the thermosphere and parts of the mesosphere and exosphere. The ionosphere is ionized by solar radiation. It plays a ...
research in the Cavendish Laboratory, where in 1949 he received his PhD degree in physics under J. A. Ratcliffe.


Career

From October 1949 to September 1954, Dr. Bracewell was a senior research officer at the Radiophysics Laboratory of the CSIRO, Sydney, concerned with very-long-wave propagation and
radio astronomy Radio astronomy is a subfield of astronomy that studies celestial objects at radio frequencies. The first detection of radio waves from an astronomical object was in 1933, when Karl Jansky at Bell Telephone Laboratories reported radiation comin ...
. He then lectured in radio astronomy at the Astronomy Department of the
University of California, Berkeley The University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley, Berkeley, Cal, or California) is a public land-grant research university in Berkeley, California. Established in 1868 as the University of California, it is the state's first land-grant u ...
, from September 1954 to June 1955 at the invitation of
Otto Struve Otto Struve (August 12, 1897 – April 6, 1963) was a Russian-American astronomer of Baltic German origins. In Russian, his name is sometimes given as Otto Lyudvigovich Struve (Отто Людвигович Струве); however, he spent most o ...
, and at Stanford University during the summer of 1955, and joined the Electrical Engineering faculty at Stanford in December 1955. In 1974 he was appointed the first Lewis M. Terman Professor and Fellow in Electrical Engineering (1974–1979). Though he retired in 1979, he continued to be active until his death.


Contributions and honours

Professor Bracewell was a Fellow of the
Royal Astronomical Society (Whatever shines should be observed) , predecessor = , successor = , formation = , founder = , extinction = , merger = , merged = , type = NG ...
(1950), Fellow and life member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (1961), Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (1989), and was a Fellow with other significant societies and organisations. For experimental contributions to the study of the ionosphere by means of very low frequency waves, Dr. Bracewell received the Duddell Premium of the Institution of Electrical Engineers, London in 1952. In 1992 he was elected to foreign associate membership of the Institute of Medicine of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (1992), the first Australian to achieve that distinction, for fundamental contributions to medical imaging. He was one of Sydney University's three honourees when alumni awards were instituted in 1992, with a citation for brain scanning, and was the 1994 recipient of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers' Heinrich Hertz medal for pioneering work in antenna
aperture synthesis Aperture synthesis or synthesis imaging is a type of interferometry that mixes signals from a collection of telescopes to produce images having the same angular resolution as an instrument the size of the entire collection. At each separation and ...
and image reconstruction as applied to radio astronomy and to computer-assisted tomography. In 1998 Dr. Bracewell was named Officer of the
Order of Australia The Order of Australia is an honour that recognises Australian citizens and other persons for outstanding achievement and service. It was established on 14 February 1975 by Elizabeth II, Queen of Australia, on the advice of the Australian Gov ...
(AO) for service to science in the fields of radio astronomy and image reconstruction. At CSIRO Radiophysics Laboratory, work that in 1942–1945 was classified appeared in a dozen reports. Activities included design, construction, and demonstration of voice-modulation equipment for a 10 cm magnetron (July 1943), a microwave triode oscillator at 25 cm using cylindrical cavity resonators, equipment designed for microwave radar in field use (wavemeter, echo box, thermistor power meter, etc.) and microwave measurement technique. Experience with numerical computation of fields in cavities led, after the war, to a Master of Engineering degree (1948) and the definitive publication on step discontinuities in radial transmission lines (1954). While at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge (1946–1950) Bracewell worked on observation and theory of upper atmospheric ionisation, contributing to experimental technique (1948), explaining solar effects (1949), and distinguishing two layers below the E-layer (1952), work recognised by the Duddell Premium. While at Stanford, Professor Bracewell constructed a microwave spectroheliograph (1961), a radio telescope comprising 32 10 ft dishes arranged in a cross, which produced daily temperature maps of the sun reliably for eleven years, the duration of a solar cycle. The first radio telescope to give output automatically in printed form, and therefore capable of worldwide dissemination by teleprinter, its daily solar weather maps received acknowledgement from
NASA The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agencies of the United States government, independent agency of the US federal government responsible for the civil List of government space agencies, space program ...
for support of the first manned landing on the moon. Subsequently, five larger 60 ft dishes were built at the same site, and were eventually removed in 2006 after efforts to preserve the site. Bracewell was interviewed during the destruction of the dishes. Many fundamental papers on restoration (1954–1962), interferometry (1958–1974) and reconstruction (1956–1961) appeared along with instrumental and observational papers. By 1961 the radio-interferometer calibration techniques developed for the
spectroheliograph The spectroheliograph is an instrument used in astronomy which captures a photographic image of the Sun at a single wavelength of light, a monochromatic image. The wavelength is usually chosen to coincide with a spectral wavelength of one of the c ...
first allowed an antenna system, with 52-inch fan beam, to equal the angular resolution of the human eye in one observation. With this beam the components of Cygnus A, spaced 100-inch, were put directly in evidence without the need for repeated observations with variable spacing
aperture synthesis Aperture synthesis or synthesis imaging is a type of interferometry that mixes signals from a collection of telescopes to produce images having the same angular resolution as an instrument the size of the entire collection. At each separation and ...
interferometry. The nucleus of the extragalactic source
Centaurus A Centaurus A (also known as NGC 5128 or Caldwell 77) is a galaxy in the constellation of Centaurus. It was discovered in 1826 by Scottish astronomer James Dunlop from his home in Parramatta, in New South Wales, Australia. There is considerable d ...
was resolved into two separate components whose right ascensions were accurately determined with a 2.3-minute fan beam at 9.1 cm. Knowing that Centaurus A was composite, Bracewell used the 6.7-minute beam of the
Parkes Observatory Parkes Observatory is a radio astronomy observatory, located north of the town of Parkes, New South Wales, Australia. It hosts Murriyang, the 64 m CSIRO Parkes Radio Telescope also known as "The Dish", along with two smaller radio telescopes. ...
64 m radio telescope at 10 cm to determine the separate declinations of the components and in so doing was the first to observe strong polarisation in an extragalactic source (1962), a discovery of fundamental significance for the structure and role of astrophysical magnetic fields. Subsequent observations made at Parkes by other observers with a 14-minute and wider beams at 21 cm and longer wavelengths, though not resolving the components, were compatible with the \lambda^2 dependence expected from Faraday rotation if magnetic fields were the polarising agent. A second major radiotelescope (1971) employing advanced concepts to achieve an angular resolution of 18 seconds of arc was designed and built at Stanford and applied to both solar and galactic studies. The calibration techniques for this leading-edge resolution passed into general use in radio interferometry via the medium of alumni. Upon the discovery of the
cosmic background radiation Cosmic background radiation is electromagnetic radiation from the Big Bang. The origin of this radiation depends on the region of the spectrum that is observed. One component is the cosmic microwave background. This component is redshifted p ...
: * a remarkable observational limit of 1.7 millikelvins, with considerable theoretical significance for cosmology, was set on the anisotropy in collaboration with PhD student E. K. Conklin (1967), and was not improved on for many years * the correct theory of a relativistic observer in a blackbody enclosure (1968) was given in the first of several papers by various authors obtaining the same result * the absolute motion of the
Sun The Sun is the star at the center of the Solar System. It is a nearly perfect ball of hot plasma, heated to incandescence by nuclear fusion reactions in its core. The Sun radiates this energy mainly as light, ultraviolet, and infrared radi ...
at 308 km/s through the cosmic background radiation was measured by Conklin in 1969, some years before independent confirmation. With the advent of the space age, Bracewell became interested in
celestial mechanics Celestial mechanics is the branch of astronomy that deals with the motions of objects in outer space. Historically, celestial mechanics applies principles of physics (classical mechanics) to astronomical objects, such as stars and planets, to ...
, made observations of the radio emission from Sputnik 1, and supplied the press with accurate charts predicting the path of Soviet satellites, which were perfectly visible, if you knew when and where to look. Following the puzzling performance of
Explorer I Explorer 1 was the first satellite launched by the United States in 1958 and was part of the U.S. participation in the International Geophysical Year (IGY). The mission followed the first two satellites the previous year; the Soviet Union ...
in orbit, he published the first explanation (1958–59) of the observed spin instability of satellites, in terms of the Poinsot motion of a non-rigid body with internal friction. He recorded the signals from Sputniks I, II and III and discussed them in terms of the satellite spin, antenna polarisation, and propagation effects of the ionised medium, especially Faraday effect. Later (1978, 1979) he invented a spinning, nulling, two-element infrared interferometer suitable for space-shuttle launching into an orbit near
Jupiter Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the largest in the Solar System. It is a gas giant with a mass more than two and a half times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined, but slightly less than one-thousandth t ...
, with milliarcsecond resolution, that could lead to the discovery of planets around stars other than the sun. This concept was elaborated in 1995 by Angel and Woolf, whose space-station version with four-element double nulling became the
Terrestrial Planet Finder The Terrestrial Planet Finder (TPF) was a proposed project by NASA to construct a system of space telescopes for detecting extrasolar terrestrial planets. TPF was postponed several times and finally cancelled in 2011. There were two telescope ...
(TPF), NASA's candidate for imaging planetary configurations of other stars. Imaging in astronomy led to participation in development of computer assisted x-ray tomography, where commercial scanners reconstruct tomographic images using the algorithm developed by Bracewell for radioastronomical reconstruction from fan-beam scans. This corpus of work has been recognized by the Institute of Medicine, an award by the
University of Sydney The University of Sydney (USYD), also known as Sydney University, or informally Sydney Uni, is a public research university located in Sydney, Australia. Founded in 1850, it is the oldest university in Australia and is one of the country's ...
, and the Heinrich Hertz medal. Service on the founding editorial board of the ''Journal for Computer-Assisted Tomography'', to which he also contributed publications, and on the scientific advisory boards of medical instrumentation companies maintained Bracewell's interest in medical imaging, which became an important part of his regular graduate lectures on imaging, and forms an important part of his 1995 text on imaging. Experience with the optics, mechanics and control of radiotelescopes led to involvement with solar thermophotovoltaic energy at the time of the energy crisis, including the fabrication of low-cost solid and perforated paraboloidal reflectors by hydraulic inflation. Bracewell is also known for being the first to propose the use of autonomous interstellar
space probes Space is the boundless three-dimensional extent in which objects and events have relative position and direction. In classical physics, physical space is often conceived in three linear dimensions, although modern physicists usually conside ...
for communication between alien civilisations as an alternative to radio transmission dialogs. This hypothetical concept has been dubbed the
Bracewell probe A Bracewell probe is a hypothetical concept for an autonomous interstellar space probe dispatched for the express purpose of communication with one or more alien civilizations. It was proposed by Ronald N. Bracewell in a 1960 paper, as an alter ...
after its inventor.


Fourier analysis

As a consequence of relating images to Fourier analysis, in 1983 he discovered a new factorisation of the discrete Fourier transform matrix leading to a fast algorithm for spectral analysis. This method, which has advantages over the fast Fourier algorithm, especially for images, is treated in '' The Hartley Transform'' (1986), in U.S. Patent 4,646,256 (1987, now in the public domain), and in over 200 technical papers by various authors that were stimulated by the discovery. Analogue methods of creating a Hartley transform plane first with light and later with microwaves were demonstrated in the laboratory and permitted the determination of electromagnetic phase by the use of
square-law detector In electronic signal processing Signal processing is an electrical engineering subfield that focuses on analyzing, modifying and synthesizing ''signals'', such as sound, images, and scientific measurements. Signal processing techniques are ...
s. A new elementary signal representation, the
Chirplet transform In signal processing, the chirplet transform is an inner product of an input signal with a family of analysis primitives called chirplets.S. Mann and S. Haykin,The Chirplet transform: A generalization of Gabor's logon transform, ''Proc. Vision Int ...
, was discovered (1991) that complements the Gabor elementary signal representations used in dynamic spectral analysis (with the property of meeting the bandwidth-duration minimum associated with the
uncertainty principle In quantum mechanics, the uncertainty principle (also known as Heisenberg's uncertainty principle) is any of a variety of mathematical inequalities asserting a fundamental limit to the accuracy with which the values for certain pairs of physic ...
). This advance opened a new field of adaptive dynamic spectra with wide application in information analysis.


Other interests

Professor Bracewell was interested in conveying an appreciation of the role of science in society to the public, in mitigating the effects of scientific illiteracy on public decision making through contact with alumni groups, and in liberal undergraduate education within the framework of the Astronomy Course Program and the Western Culture program in Values, Technology, Science and Society, in both of which he taught for some years. He gave the 1996 Bunyan Lecture on ''The Destiny of Man''. He was also interested in the trees of Stanford's campus and published a book about them. He also taught an undergraduate seminar titled I Dig Trees. Bracewell was also a designer and builder of sundials. He and his son Mark Bracewell built one on the South side of the Terman Engineering Building; after that building was demolished, a new home for the sundial, at the same orientation, was found on the Jen-Hsun Huang Engineering Center. He built another sundial at the home of his son, and another on the deck of professor John G. Linvill's house. The Bracewell Radio Sundial at the
Very Large Array The Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) is a centimeter-wavelength radio astronomy observatory located in central New Mexico on the Plains of San Agustin, between the towns of Magdalena and Datil, ~ west of Socorro. The VLA comprises twent ...
was built in his honor.


Selected publications

* Bracewell, Ronald N. and Pawsey, J. L., ''Radio Astronomy'' (Oxford, 1955) ''(also translated into Russian and reprinted in China)'' * Bracewell, Ronald N., ''Radio Interferometry of Discrete Sources'' (Proceedings of the IRE, January 1958) * Bracewell, Ronald N., ed., ''Paris Symposium on Radio Astronomy, IAU Symposium no. 9 and URSI Symposium no. 1, held July 30, 1958 – August 6, 1958'' (Stanford Univ. Press, Stanford, CA, 1959) ''(also translated into Russian)'' * Professor Bracewell translated ''Radio Astronomy'', by J. L. Steinberg and J. Lequeux, (McGraw-Hill, 1963) from French * (NB. Second edition also translated into Japanese and Polish.) * Bracewell, Ronald N., ''Trees on the Stanford Campus'' (Stanford: Samizdat, 1973) * Bracewell, Ronald N., ''The Galactic Club: Intelligent Life in Outer Space'' (Portable Stanford: Alumni Association, 1974) ''(also translated into Dutch, Japanese, and Italian)'' * (NB. Also translated into German and Russian.) * Bracewell, Ronald N., ''Two-Dimensional Imaging'' (Prentice-Hall, 1995) * Bracewell, Ronald N., ''Fourier Analysis and Imaging'' (Plenum, 2004) * Bracewell, Ronald N., ''Trees of Stanford and Environs'' (Stanford Historical Society, 2005)


Chapter contributions

Bracewell has contributed chapters to: * Textbook of Radar ''Microwave Transmission and Cavity Resonator Theory,'' ed. E. G. Bowen, 1946 * Advances in Astronautical Sciences ''Satellite Rotation,'' ed. H. Jacobs, 1959 * The Radio Noise Spectrum ''Correcting Noise Maps for Beamwidth,'' ed. D. H. Menzel, 1960 * Modern Physics for the Engineer ''Radio Astronomy,'' ed. L. Ridenour and W. Nierenberg, 1960 * Statistical methods in Radio Wave Propagation ''Antenna Tolerance Theory,'' ed. W. C. Hoffman, 1960 * Advances in Geophysics ''Satellite Studies of the Ionization in Space by Radio,'' ed. H. E. Landsberg, 1961 (O. K. Garriott and Ronald N. Bracewell) * Handbuch der Physik ''Radio Astronomy Techniques,'' ed. S. Flugge, 1962 * Encyclopedia of Electronics ''Extraterrestrial Radio Noise'', ed. C. Susskind, 1962 * Stars and Galaxies ''Radio Broadcasts from the Depths of Space,'' ed. T. L. Page, 1962 * Radio Waves and Circuits ''Aerials and Data Processing,'' ed. S. Silver, 1963 * Light and Life in the Universe ''Life in the Galaxy,'' ed. S. T. Butler and H. Messel, 1964 * Encyclopædia Britannica ''Telescope, Radio'', 1967 * Vistas in Science ''The Microwave Sky,'' ed. David L. Arm, 1968 * Man in Inner and Outer Space ''The Sun (Five Chapters),'' ed. H. Messel and S. T. Butler, 1968 * Image Reconstruction from Projections: Implementation and Applications ''Image Reconstruction in Radio Astronomy,'' ed. G. Hermann, 1979 * Annual Review of Astronomy and Astrophysics ''Computer Image Processing,'' ed. G. Burbidge et al., 1979 * Energy for Survival ''How It All Began,'' ''Man the Lazy Animal,'' and ''Energy from Sunlight,'' ed. H. Messel, 1979 * Life in the Universe ''Manifestations of Advanced Civilizations,'' ed. J. Billingham, 1981 * Extraterrestrials: Where Are They? ''Preemption of the Galaxy by the First Advanced Civilization,'' ed. M. H. Hart and B. Zuckerman, 1982, 1995 * Transformations in Optical Signal Processing ''Fourier Inversion of Deficient Data,'' ed. W. T. Rhodes, J. R. Fienup and B. E. A. Saleh, 1984 * The Early Years of Radio Astronomy ''Early Work on Imaging Theory in Radio Astronomy,'' ed. W. T. Sullivan, III, 1984 * Indirect Imaging ''Inversion of Nonplanar Visibilities,'' ed. J. A. Roberts, 1984 * Fourier Techniques and Applications ''The Life of Joseph Fourier'' and ''Fourier Techniques and Applications,'' ed. J. F. Price, 1985 * Yearbook of Science and Technology ''Wavelets,'' 1996 * Encyclopedia of Applied Physics ''Fourier and Other Mathematical Transforms'' 1997 *
Cornelius Lanczos __NOTOC__ Cornelius (Cornel) Lanczos ( hu, Lánczos Kornél, ; born as Kornél Lőwy, until 1906: ''Löwy (Lőwy) Kornél''; February 2, 1893 – June 25, 1974) was a Hungarian-American and later Hungarian-Irish mathematician and physicist. Accor ...
—Collected Published Papers with Commentaries ''The Fast Fourier Transform'' and''Smoothing Data by Analysis and by Eye'' ed. W. R. Davis et al., 1999


See also

* cas (mathematics)


References


External links


Stanford Web Profile


{{DEFAULTSORT:Bracewell, Ronald 1921 births 2007 deaths Stanford University School of Engineering faculty 20th-century Australian astronomers 20th-century Australian physicists Officers of the Order of Australia Fellows of St Catherine's College, Oxford Fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science Fellow Members of the IEEE Alumni of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge Search for extraterrestrial intelligence People educated at Sydney Boys High School 20th-century American astronomers Australian emigrants to the United States Members of the National Academy of Medicine