Kevin Rolland Thompson (1954 – 2015) was the Group Director, Research and Development/Optics at Synopsys, Inc.[1] His work contributed to developments in nanolithography, astrophysics and the advancement of optics[2]
Kevin Rolland Thompson | |
---|---|
Born | October 5, 1954 Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA |
Died | November 20, 2015 |
Occupation | Physicist |
Spouse | Jannick Rolland |
Early life
editKevin Thompson was born in the suburbs of Minneapolis, in Edina.[3] He graduated from Edina High School in 1972. In 1976 he received B.S. degrees in physics and astrophysics from the University of Minnesota. He received a Ph.D. for his work "Aberration fields in tilted and decentered optical systems",[4] from the College of Optical Sciences with Roland Shack in 1980. His work on aberration of rotationally nonsymmetrical optical systems laid out initially on his thesis has been described as significant.[2] The theory to treat these systems was called "Nodal Aberration Theory" (NAT). [5]
Later career
editHe worked at Perkin-Elmer Corporation for 10 years as an optical designer in microlithography applications and advanced systems for ground- and space-based remote sensing. He subsequently worked at Optical Research Associates for nearly 25 years, where he was vice president of optical engineering services. The company was acquired by Synopsys in 2010. At Synopsys he was group director of R&D in optics. At that time he was also a visiting scientist at the University of Rochester Institute of Optics. He was involved with optics projects with multiple companies over a 25-year period.[6]
Highlights of his career include working on the null lens designs for the Hubble 1st Servicing Mission and optical modeling and analysis for the first generation EUV illuminator for lithography at 13nm node.[citation needed]
Personal life
editKevin Thompson was married to Jannick Rolland (Professor of Optical Engineering) at the Institute of Optics at the University of Rochester and CTO of LighTopTech)[7] He was a collector of historical books on optics.[3]
Posthumous
editThe Optical Society established an annual award in 2017. It is named Kevin P. Thompson Optical Design Innovator Award.[8] The aim of the award is the following "Recognizes significant contributions to lens design, optical engineering, or metrology by an individual as evidenced by one or more of the following: innovative and rigorous research; optical system design with a foundation in aberration theory; development of advanced metrology capabilities; product development; patents; or publications."
Honours and awards
editSPIE A.E. Conrady Award in Optical Engineering, 2013[9]
Alumnus of the Year of the College of Optical Sciences at the University of Arizona, 2015[2]
References
edit- ^ "OSA In memoriam".
- ^ a b c "SPIE In memoriam".
- ^ a b "ETENDUE: KEVIN P. ROLLAND-THOMPSON".
- ^ "Aberration fields in tilted and decentered optical systems" (PDF).
- ^ Rogers, John R. (27 November 2017). "Origins and fundamentals of nodal aberration theory". In Clark, Peter P; Muschaweck, Julius A; Rogers, John R; Pfisterer, Richard N (eds.). International Optical Design Conference 2017. Vol. 10590. p. 83. Bibcode:2017SPIE10590E..0RR. doi:10.1117/12.2299712. ISBN 9781510616721. S2CID 173180998 – via SPIE.
- ^ "Obituary Finger Lake Times". Legacy.com.
- ^ "Jannick Rolland Faculty Bio".
- ^ "OSA Kevin P. Thompson Optical Design Innovator Award".
- ^ "SPIE A.E. Conrady Award in Optical Engineering".
External links
edit- blog Idle Diffractions. Musings on the past, present, and future of optics by Dr. Kevin P. Thomson
- Kevin Rolland Thompson publications indexed by Google Scholar