H. Nyquist

E685452

H. Nyquist was a Swedish-American engineer and physicist whose pioneering work in communication theory and control systems laid foundational principles for modern telecommunication and signal processing.

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Label Occurrences
H. Nyquist canonical 1

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Swedish-American
person
physicist
academicDegree PhD in physics
awardReceived IEEE Medal of Honor NERFINISHED
Stuart Ballantine Medal NERFINISHED
birthName Harry Theodor Nyquist NERFINISHED
countryOfCitizenship Sweden
United States of America
dateOfBirth 1889-02-07
dateOfDeath 1976-04-04
doctoralAdvisor Henry Andrews Bumstead NERFINISHED
educatedAt University of North Dakota NERFINISHED
Yale University
employer American Telephone and Telegraph Company NERFINISHED
Bell Telephone Laboratories NERFINISHED
ethnicGroup Swedes NERFINISHED
familyName Nyquist NERFINISHED
fieldOfWork communication theory
control theory
information theory
signal processing
telecommunications
gender male
givenName Harry NERFINISHED
influenced Claude Shannon NERFINISHED
modern digital communications
knownFor development of stability criteria for feedback systems
foundational contributions to sampling theory
pioneering work in telecommunication theory
languageOfWorkOrName English
Swedish
memberOf National Academy of Sciences
surface form: National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
name Harry Nyquist NERFINISHED
notableIdea Nyquist criterion for telegraph transmission NERFINISHED
relationship between bandwidth and data rate
notableWork Nyquist plot NERFINISHED
Nyquist rate NERFINISHED
Nyquist stability criterion NERFINISHED
Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem NERFINISHED
Thermal noise formula
placeOfBirth Nilsby, Värmland County, Sweden NERFINISHED
placeOfDeath Harlingen, Texas, United States NERFINISHED
workLocation New Jersey, United States NERFINISHED
New York, United States NERFINISHED

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1928 paper "Certain Topics in Telegraph Transmission Theory" author H. Nyquist
subject surface form: Certain Topics in Telegraph Transmission Theory