Christopher J. Hardy
Christopher J. Hardy is an American physicist and inventor of several magnetic resonance imaging subsystem technologies for use in real time MRI and cardiac MR imaging and spectroscopy.
Biography
Hardy obtained his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in March, 1983. He is currently a principal scientist and Coolidge Fellow at General Electric. He developed the first graphical approach that allowed physicians to explore anatomy in real time during cardiac MRI, as opposed to viewing groups of images at a later time, and he also developed a technique that improved imaging speed. Both accomplishments have gained widespread use. He has also led the teams that developed 32 channel and 128 channel General Electric MRI systems.Hardy has written 98 research papers and 54 patents.
Awards and honors
- 1986, 1993 Inventor of the Year, Eastern New York Patent Law Association
- 1988 Distinguished Inventor, Intellectual Property Owners, Inc.
- 1989, 1994, 1997, 2005 GE Whitney Gallery of Technical Achievers / Whitney Award
- 1996 GE Gold Patent Medallion
- 2002 Fellow, American Physical Society
- 2003 Fellow, American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering
- 2008 Redington Award for Imaging Technologies
- 2010 Fellow, International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine
- 2010 GE Coolidge Fellow
- 2011, 2012 Distinguished Reviewer, Magn Reson Med, J Magn Reson Imag
Selected patents
- Hardy, Christopher J, "Method for calculating wave velocities in blood vessels"
- L. Marinelli, CJ Hardy, "Method for reconstructing images"
- Hardy, C.J. and Sasikanth Manipatruni, General Electric Co, 2014. Photonic system and method for optical data transmission in medical imaging systems. U.S. Patent 8,847,598.