Weber Research Institute
The Weber Research Institute is a research group at the Polytechnic Institute of New York University. The institute's research focuses on electromagnetics, including "electromagnetic, acoustic and lightwave propagation, scattering and detection, together with electromagnetic waves and the environment in communication and signaling systems."
History
The Microwave Research Institute was founded in 1945 by Ernst Weber at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. Research conducted at the institute included work in the areas of "electromagnetic theory, antennas and radiation, network theory and microwave networks, microwave components and devices." MRI was internationally regarded as one of the foremost centers of research on microwave field theory in the world. In 1985 it was renamed the Weber Research Institute in honor of its founder.Leadership
- Ernst Weber
- Nathan Marcuvitz
- Arthur Oliner
- Erich E. Kunhardt
Notable researchers
According to a 1968 inquiry by the journal MicroWaves, microwave engineers named by a wide margin the Polytechnic Institute as the school from which they had received their training.
Publications
The institute held annual symposia on topics in the field of electronic and published 24 accompanying volumes, known as the MRI Symposium Proceedings.MRI Symposium topics include:
- Modern Network Synthesis
- Nonlinear Circuit Analysis
- Information Networks
- Modern Advances in Microwave Techniques
- Modern Network Synthesis II
- Nonlinear Circuit Analysis II
- The Role of Solid State Phenomena in Electric Circuits
- Electronic Waveguides
- Millimeter Waves
- Active Networks and Feedback Systems
- Electromagnetics and Fluid Dynamics of Gaseous Plasma
- Mathematical Theory of Automata
- Optical Masers
- Quasi-Optics
- System Theory
- Generalized Networks
- Modern Optics
- Turbulence of Fluids and Plasma
- Computer Processing of Communications
- Submillimeter Waves
- Computers and Automata
- Computer-Communications Networks and Teletraffic
- Optical and Acoustical Micro-Electronics
- Computer Software Engineering