作者:
BECKER, LOUIS A.SIEGRIST, FRANKLIN I.Louis A. Becker was born in New Rochelle
N.Y. in 1930 receiving his earlier education in the New Rochelle Public Schools. He completed his undergraduate studies at Manhattan College in 1952 receiving his BCE degree during which time he was also engaged in land surveying. Following this he did postgraduate study at Virginia Polytechnic Institute obtaining his MS in 1954. He joined Naval Ship Research and Development Center in 1953 as a Junior Engineer and is currently the Head of the Engineering & Facilities Division Structures Department. His field of specialization is Structural Research and Development. Franklin I. Siegrist was born in Knoxville
Tenn. in 1937 receiving his earlier education in the Public Schools of Erie Pa. He attended Pennsylvania State University graduating in 1962 with a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering having prior to that time served four years in the U. S. Navy. He was a Junior Engineer in the AC Spark Plug Division of General Motors from 1962 until 1964 at which time he came to the David Taylor Model Basin as an Electrical Engineer in the Industrial Department. He is currently Supervisory Engineer for Electrical and Electronics Engineering Structures Department Naval Ship Research and Development Center. His field of specialization is Electrical Engineering Control Systems Data Collection Systems Computer Applications to Structural Research and Hydraulic System Design. In the last of these he holds Patent Rights on a “Hydraulic Supercharge and Cooling Circuit” granted in 1970.
作者:
BERG, DAVID J.JONES, WALTER S.MARRON, HUGH W.David Berg
a native of Michigan received his Bachelor's Degree in Mechanical Engineering from the Michigan Technological University in 1951 after which he began his career with the Bureau of Ships in the Machinery Design Branch on noise shock and vibration problems. He was project engineer for the axial flow pumpjet development on USS Witek (DD848) and USS Glover (AGDE1) and received his Master of Engineering Degree in Naval Architecture in 1964 from the University of California Berkeley. Mr. Berg is currently acting head of the Ship Performance and Trials Section of the Propulsion Systems Analysis Branch in the Naval Ship Engineering Center. He received the Meritorious Civilian Service Award in 1962 for contributions to the design of the USS Thresher (SSN593) and was awarded the Superior Performance Award for Outstanding Performance in 1966. Hugh Marron
a native of Pennsylvania received his Bachelor of Science Degree in Civil Engineering from the Pennsylvania State University in 1939. Upon graduation he was employed for one year with the Pennsylvania Department of Highways as a construction engineer. In July 1940 he became a Marine Engineer at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard where after a period of apprenticeship and special training in this new field he was assigned to the Machinery Scientific Group of the Design Division. Then in October 1945 he was transferred to the Design Division of the Bureau of Ships. Mr. Marron is now a Project Coordinator in the Propulsion Power and Auxiliary Systems Division of the Naval Ship Engineering Center. Walter S. Jones
a native of Virginia graduated from the George Washington University with a BME in June 1958. From July of that year through June 1965 he served with the Machinery Design Branch of the Bureau of Ships where he was Project Engineer for the Hydroneu-matic Ram Jet and Water jet Propulsion Systems. Mr. Jones is currently the Machinery Coordinator for the Computer Aided Ship Design Program in the Naval Ship Engineering Center.
作者:
HERR, DONALDBLUMENSTOCK, NORMANHONORARY MEMBERTHE AUTHORS MR. HERR
Honorary Member of the A.S.N.E. has the B.S. in E.E. M.S. in E.E. and E.E. degrees. He was National Coffin Foundation Fellow of the General Electric Company National Tau Beta Pi Fellow and National Sigma Tau Fellow at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering University of Pennsylvania and at M.I.T. prior to World War II. He was also awarded a National Gordon McKay Fellowship by Harvard University and received the A. Atwater Kent Award in Electrical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. A licensed radio amateur at 12 Mr. Herr first worked summers at RCA and Bell Laboratories and was with the General Electric Company in 1939 and 1940 as development engineer before volunteering for over five years of active Naval duty. He served as Officer-in-Charge Electrical Minesweeping Group Bureau of Ships December 1940 to April 1943 as Acting Design Superintendent and Officer-in-Charge
Los Angeles-Long Beach Harbor Surge Investigation U. S. Naval Shipyard Terminal Island to November 1944 and as Research-Patents Liaison Officer
Office of Naval Research to January 1946 returning to inactive duty as lieutenant commander U.S.N.R. Mr. Herr received two Navy letters of commendation. Since 1946 he was assistant to vice president in charge of the engineering division of Control Instrument Company Brooklyn New York and is project engineer at the Reeves Instrument Corporation responsible for new servo and computer component developments. Mr. Herr has been associated with Dean Harold Pender and Professor Ernst Guillemin in advanced network theory and has specialized for 12 years in development and design of servomechanisms differential analyzers computers and fire control systems utilizing advanced network analysis and synthesis methods. Mr. Herr is also presently teaching servomechanisms network-synthesis and feedback amplifier design in the Graduate School of the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn. He has contributed frequently to the JOURNAL OF THE AMERICA
作者:
HERR, DONALD HONORARYMEMBERTHE AUTHOR:Mr.Herr
Honorary Member of the A.S.N.E. has the B.S. in E.E. M.S. in E.E. and E.E. degrees. He was National Coffin Foundation Fellow of the General Electric Company National Tau Beta Pi Fellow and National Sigma Tau Fellow at the Moore School of Electrical Engineering University of Pennsylvania and at M.I.T. prior to World War II. He was also awarded a National Gordon McKay Fellowship by Harvard University and received the A. Atwater Kent Award in Electrical Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania. A licensed radio amateur at 12 Mr. Herr first worked summers at RCA and Bell Laboratories and was with the General Electric Company in 1939 and 1940 as development engineer before volunteering for over five years of active Naval duty. He served as Officer-in-Charge Electrical Minesweeping Group Bureau of Ships December 1940 to April 1943 as Acting Design Superintendent and Officer-in-Charge
Los Angeles-Long Beach Harbor Surge Investigation U. S. Naval Shipyard Terminal Island to November 1944 and as Research-Patents Liaison Officer
Office of Naval Research to January 1946 returning to inactive duty as lieutenant commander U.S.N.R. Mr. Herr received two Navy letters of commendation. Since 1946 he was assistant to vice president in charge of the engineering division of Control Instrument Company Brooklyn New York and is project engineer at the Reeves Instrument Corporation responsible for new servo and computer component developments. Mr. Herr has been associated with Dean Harold Pender and Professor Ernst Guillemin in advanced network theory and has specialized for 12 years in development and design of servomechanisms differential analyzers computers and fire control systems utilizing advanced network analysis and synthesis methods. He has contributed frequently to the JournalOF THE AmericanSocietyOF NavalEngineersand was the Society's 1945 Prize Essayist on the subject: “Engineering in the Navy as seen by an Active Reserve Officer.” He is senior member of the I.R.E
Review considers reasons for design of automation, difficulties in process, and practice of partial automation;five distinct design studies in design of naval ships are indicated and related to digital ship model evol...
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Review considers reasons for design of automation, difficulties in process, and practice of partial automation;five distinct design studies in design of naval ships are indicated and related to digital ship model evolved on basis of feasibility studies;further development work is noted and future ship design method suggested;design problems programmed by personnel of U S Bureau of Ships design Div and computer utilization programs at David Taylor Model Basin in field of surface ship design are listed. Before Assn Senior Engrs, U S Bur Ships.
After two decades, data processing has finally, and probably forever, found its niche among civil engineering and construction (CEC) professionnals, through word processors, digitizing tables, management software, and...
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ISBN:
(数字)9781468474046
ISBN:
(纸本)9781850912538
After two decades, data processing has finally, and probably forever, found its niche among civil engineering and construction (CEC) professionnals, through word processors, digitizing tables, management software, and increasingly via drawing software and computer-aided design (CAD), recently, robots have even started invading work sites. What are the main trends of CAD and robotics in the field of architecture and civil enginee ring? What type of R&D effort do university and industrial laboratories undertake to devise the professional software that will be on the market in the next three to five years? These are the issues which will be addressed during this symposium. To this effect, we have planned concurrently an equipment and software show, as well as a twofold conference. Robotic is just starting in the field of civil engineering and construction. A pioneer, the Civil engineering Departement of Carnegie-Mellon University, in the United States, organized the first two international symposia, in 1984 and 1985 in Pittsburgh. This is the third meeting on the subject (this year, however, we have also included CAD). It constitutes the first large international symposium where CAD experts, specialists in architecture and CEC robotics will meet. From this standpoint, it should be an ideal forum for exchanging views and expe riences on a wide range of topics, and we hope it will give rise to novel applications and new syntheses. This symposium is intented for scientists, teachers, students and also for manufacturers and all CEC professionals.
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