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Carl E. Patton was born in San
Antonio, Texas on September 14, 1941. He obtained the B.S. degree in
physics in 1963 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where
he investigated crystal field spectra at the National Magnet
Laboratory. He obtained the Master's and Ph.D. degrees in electrical
engineering in 1964 and 1967, respectively, from the California
Institute of Technology, where he studied dynamic magnetization
processes, domain wall dynamics, and ferromagnetic resonance in thin
films.
Dr. Patton joined the Raytheon Research Division, Waltham,
Massachusetts in 1967, where he worked on microwave relaxation and
nonlinear processes in ferrites. He joined the Physics faculty at
Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado in 1971 as an
Associate Professor. In 1976, Dr. Patton was advanced to the rank of
Professor. At Colorado State University, he continued research on
ferrite materials, and initiated new work on magnetism in metals and
alloys, magnetism in lunar matter, and Brillouin light scattering in
magnetic systems. Current research interests include millimeter wave
ferrite materials, Brillouin light scattering in magnetic systems,
spin-wave instability and nonlinear microwave professes in microwave
magnetics, off-resonance microwave losses and effective linewidth,
magnetic excitations in magnetic superlattices, nonlinear dynamics and
chaos, ferrite-ferroelectric composite materials, and microwave
solitons in thin magnetic films.
Dr. Patton has held various visiting appointments worldwide: Institute
of Solid State Physics, University of Tokyo and Tohoku University,
Sendai (1969-1970, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Fellowship); Institute of Physics, Czechoslovak Academy of Science,
Prague (1973 and 1979, National Academy of Science Exchange
Fellowship); Institut fur Angewandte Festkorperphysik, University of
Freiburg, West Germany (1977 - 1978, Alexander von Humboldt Research
Fellowship); Department of Physics, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby,
BC, Canada (1984 - 1985); NIST, Boulder, Colorado (1991 - 1992),
Universität Kaiserslautern, Germany (1999-2000, Alexander von
Humboldt Research Fellowship).
Dr. Patton is a Fellow of the American Physical Society (1985), and a
Fellow of the IEEE (1989). He has served as Newsletter Editor for the
IEEE Magnetics Society (1973-1976), as a member of numerous program
committees for the IEEE sponsored Intermag Conference and the
Conference on Magnetism and Magnetic Materials, as a Reviews Editor for
the IEEE Transactions on Magnetics (1984-1986), as Editor-in-Chief of
the Transactions (1987-1991), and as a member of the Administrative
Committee of the IEEE Magnetics Society. He served as Program
Co-Chairman for the 1987 Conference on Magnetism and Magnetic Materials
(Chicago) and was the General Chairman for the 1990 Conference (San
Diego). Dr. Patton was an IEEE Magnetics Society Distinguished Lecturer
for 1993 and 1994, with 58 lectures in six countries. He was the
1998/1999 Chair of the newly formed Topical Group on Magnetism and its
Applications under the American Physical Society. In April 2000 he was
awarded the IEEE Third Millennium Medal. In April 2003 he was
awarded the IEEE Magnetics Society Lifetime Achievement Award. He
served as Secretary/Treasurer for the IEEE Magnetics Society for
2003/2004 and is currently Vice President of the Society for a
2005/2006 term.
Dr. Patton has authored or co-authored over 200 publications in the
archival technical literature on research in basic and applied
magnetics. He has been the recipient of development awards, research
grants, and contracts from various government agencies and industrial
organizations such as the National Science Foundation, NASA, NATO, the
U.S. Army, the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Navy, Verbatim, Ampex, Rockwell
International, TRW, Honeywell, Sandia National Laboratories, Phillips
Petroleum, CMI Technology, the National Institute of Standards and
technology, the Information Storage Industry Consortium, and Pacific
Ceramics, with total funding in excess of 9.4 million dollars. He has
held consulting appointments with Westinghouse, North American
Aviation, Northrop-Grumman, Boeing Aerospace, the Naval Research
Laboratory, and the U.S. Army Research Laboratory.
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