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Hugh Duncan Griffiths
British engineer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hugh Duncan Griffiths, OBE, FRS, FREng is a British electronic engineer. He is known for his contributions in radar research, especially in bistatic radar and passive radar for which he has received many awards and prizes. He was awarded an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for services to engineering in 2019.[1]
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Career and research
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Griffiths received the BA degree in Physics from Keble College, Oxford University in 1975 (MA Physics 1978), then spent three years working in industry, before joining the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering at University College London, where he received the PhD degree in 1986 and the DSc(Eng) degree in 2000 for published work on radar and sonar.[2] He was Head of Department from 2001 to 2006 and then Principal of the Defence College of Management and Technology at Shrivenham from 2006 to 2008.[3]
Since 2009 Griffiths holds the THALES/Royal Academy Chair of RF Sensors in the Department of Electronic and Electrical Engineering at University College London, England.[4]
He has published over 550 research papers in journals and conference proceedings.[5] Books include Modern Antennas (Springer, 2005), Advances in Bistatic Radar (Scitech, 2007), Radar Automatic Target Recognition and Non-Cooperative Target Recognition (IET, 2013), An Introduction to Passive Radar (Artech House, 2017 – also published in Chinese, second edition 2022).
- Since 1982 he has served as Editor-in-Chief of the IET Radar, Sonar and Navigation journal.[6]
- In 2003 he was elected Freeman of the City of London and Liveryman of the Worshipful Company of Engineers.[7]
- In 2017 he was appointed Chair of the Defence Science Expert Committee (DSEC) in the UK Ministry of Defence.[8]
- He is a member of the Home Office Science Advisory Council (HOSAC).[9]
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Awards and honours
- 1994elected FIOA (Institute of Acoustics). : [10]
- 1995elected FIEE (now FIET). : [11]
- 1996IEEE AES Nathanson Award ‘for advancement of radar, remote sensing, antenna technology, and radar education’. : [12]
- 1997Elected Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering. : [13]
- 1999elected FIEEE ‘for contributions to synthetic aperture radar (SAR), interferometric SAR, and sonar’. : [14]
- 2012IET A F Harvey Prize. : [15]
- 2013IEEE Mimno award. : [16]
- 2014IEEE AES Nathanson Award ‘for advancement of radar, remote sensing, antenna technology, and radar education’. : [17]
- 2017IEEE Dennis J. Picard Medal for Radar Technologies and Applications ‘for technology leadership and exceptional contributions to multistatic radar’. : [18]
- 2017IET Achievement Medal for Radar Engineering. : [19]
- 2019appointed OBE for services to engineering. : [20]
- 2019IEEE AES Nathanson Award ‘for advancement of radar, remote sensing, antenna technology, and radar education’. : [21]
- 2021elected Fellow of the Royal Society. : [22]
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References
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