• DocumentCode
    2369359
  • Title

    University Training of Tube Engineers, in the US and Abroad

  • Author

    Caryotakis, George

  • Author_Institution
    Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Menlo Park, CA
  • fYear
    0
  • fDate
    0-0 0
  • Firstpage
    15
  • Lastpage
    15
  • Abstract
    Approximately 30 years ago, it became apparent to the US tube industry that new engineering hires were not receiving specialized training in vacuum electronics because most or all universities had dropped related courses from their curricula. Twenty years earlier, the microwave tube industry was hiring engineers with PhD and Master´s degrees from Stanford, University of California and MIT, who had actually built tubes in the university laboratories, tested them, and published papers on their work. These engineers, the pioneers in our industry, were approaching middle age in the 70s, and the schools they had graduated from were were no longer interested in microwave tubes. The US military developed similar concerns about this situation since the Cold War was at its peak and the DoD depended on the tube industry for electronic warfare components
  • Keywords
    industrial training; microwave tubes; military equipment; electronic warfare components; microwave tubes; tube engineers; university training; Defense industry; Electron tubes; Electronics industry; Industrial electronics; Industrial training; Laboratories; Linear accelerators; Research and development; Thermal force; Thermal management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Vacuum Electronics Conference, 2006 held Jointly with 2006 IEEE International Vacuum Electron Sources., IEEE International
  • Conference_Location
    Monterey, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    1-4244-0108-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/IVELEC.2006.1666162
  • Filename
    1666162