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William C. Jakes is an American engineer, known for is development of microwave mobile communications.
Born on May 15, 1922 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, his lifelong fascination with radio started as a Cub Scout when he built a crystal set to fulfill one of the advancement requirements. This shaped his entire education, culminating in the Ph.D.E.E. degree in 1949 from Northwestern University, after two years in the Navy as a radar maintenance officer. His doctoral thesis was concerned with radiation from dielectric tube waveguides.
After graduation, Bill joined AT&T Bell Labs in Holmdel, New Jersey. He spent the next decade doing research on microwave antennas and propagation. He then enjoyed an exciting two years as Project Engineer designing and operating the Bell Labs station for participation in Project Echo, the first successful satellite communication experiment bouncing microwaves from coast to coast off an orbiting 100-foot diameter balloon.
Shortly afterwards, Bill was promoted to Department Head at Bell Labs to "do something sensible about mobile radio," in the words of John R. Pierce of the Labs. This led to intensive studies of propagation, antennas, and systems to characterize and cope with the hostile mobile radio environment. Many important discoveries and contributions were made by Bill and his people over the next eight years, most of which are described in their book published in 1974, "Microwave Mobile Communications.” The cellular concept, invented earlier, was extensively analyzed and many important parameters and their inter-relationships were established. All of this work helped to lay down the basic physical and system principles which make possible the present cellular systems.
In 1971 Bill was promoted to Director of the Radio Transmission Laboratory in North Andover, Massachusetts, responsible for development of microwave radio relay systems. Eventually he became Director of the Transmission Terminals and Radio Laboratory. Bill retired from Bell Labs in 1987.
Besides a lifelong dedication to the communication sciences, Bill has an interest almost as strong in music. He is an accomplished clarinetist, having played in a number of community symphony orchestras at various times and also had his own "big band" (“Bill Jakes & His Orchestra") in high school and college. He has been an avid downhill skier for over thirty years and enjoys an occasional brisk game of tennis. He lives at home in Massachusetts with his wife, Mary, whom he married in 1948. Their son, Bob, also lives in Massachusetts, and their daughter, Elizabeth, resides in Vermont.
Dr. Jakes is co-recipient of the 1987 IEEE Alexander Graham Bell Medal [1] , along with Joel S. Engel and Richard H. Frenkiel, "For fundamental contributions to the theory, design and deployment of cellular mobile communications systems." William C. Jakes invented the following patent [2]
Awards & Patents
editReferences
edit- ^ http://www.ieee.org/documents/bell_rl.pdf
- ^ www.google.com/patent/aboutJAKES_JR_MICROWAVE_SWITCH.html?id=ws5vAAAAEBAJ
- ^ http://www.google.com/patent/aboutJAKES_JR_MICROWAVE_SWITCH.html?id=ws5vAAAAEBAJ
- ^ http://http://www.ieee.org/about/awards/index.html
- ^ http://www.google.com/patents?hl=en&lr=&vid=USPAT3566021 REAL TIME THREE DIMENSIONAL TELEVISION Inventor William C. Jakes et al
- ^ http://oai.dtic.mil/oai/oai?verb=getRecord&metadataPrefix=html&identifier=AD0268841
- ^ http://www.google.com/patents?hl=en&lr=&vid=USPAT3195137 CASSEGRAINIAN ANTENNA WITH APERTURE BLOCKING CORRECTION William C. Jakes et al
External links
edit- [1] Link to "Microwave Mobile Communications."
- [2] Link information about the IEEE Alexander Graham Bell Award and list of present & past recipients.