John G. Frayne
John G. Frayne was a physicist and sound engineer.
Career
Frayne received his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Minnesota while working at the Bell Laboratories. In 1928, he went to California Institute of Technology as a National Research Fellow in Physics.In 1949, with Halley Wolfe, he wrote the classic textbook Elements of Sound Recording.
Among his technical achievements were the development of sound recording techniques and their reproduction
for optical sound recording systems, which led to stereo-optical formats used by films in the 1970s and '80s. He was a
co-inventor of the sphere densitometer, which won a Scientific or Technical Academy Award in 1941. He was also the co-inventor of the stereo disc cutter which was standard in the recording industry, and the co-inventor of the inter-modulation techniques of distortion measurements, which won him an Academy Award in 1953.
He was awarded a Gordon E. Sawyer Award by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in 1983.