W. G. Cady
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Walter Guyton Cady (December 10, 1874 – December 9, 1974) was a noted American physicist and
electrical engineer Electrical engineering is an engineering discipline concerned with the study, design, and application of equipment, devices, and systems which use electricity, electronics, and electromagnetism. It emerged as an identifiable occupation in the l ...
. He was a pioneer in piezoelectricity, and in 1921 developed the first quartz crystal oscillator. Cady was born in Providence, Rhode Island, graduated from
Brown University Brown University is a private research university in Providence, Rhode Island. Brown is the seventh-oldest institution of higher education in the United States, founded in 1764 as the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providenc ...
in 1895, and studied 1897-1900 at the University of Berlin, receiving his Ph.D. in Physics in 1900. (From 1895 to 1897 he was also instructor in mathematics at Brown.) He was a Magnetic Observer from 1900 to 1902 with the Coast and Geodetic Survey, and from 1902 to 1946 he was a professor of physics at Wesleyan University, where his principal interests included electrical discharges in gases, piezoelectricity, ultrasound, piezoelectric resonators and oscillators, and crystal devices. Before World War I, Cady investigated arc discharges and radio detectors, but during the war became interested in crystals as he worked with
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's Research Laboratory, Columbia University, and the Naval Experimental Station in New London, Connecticut, on using high-frequency sound generated by piezoelectricity to detect
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s. His early experiments employed Rochelle salt crystals as transducers. After noticing that a quartz crystal connected to a variable-frequency electronic oscillator would vibrate strongly at a very specific frequency, but that at other frequencies it would not vibrate at all, he had the insight to apply crystal oscillators to radio frequency applications. In 1921 Cady designed the first circuit to control frequencies based on quartz crystal resonator, and received two fundamental patents on resonators and their applications to radio in 1923. Cady quickly realized that such circuits could be used as
frequency standard A frequency standard is a stable oscillator used for frequency calibration or reference. A frequency standard generates a fundamental frequency with a high degree of accuracy and precision. Harmonics of this fundamental frequency are used to p ...
s, in 1922 published an
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paper on this application, and in 1923 made the first direct international comparison of frequency standards by comparing his quartz resonators with frequency standards in Italy, France, England, and the United States. Cady was president of the Institute of Radio Engineers in 1932. During World War II, Cady again worked on military applications of piezoelectricity, including trainers for radar operators that used piezoelectric transducers in liquid tanks to generate realistic radar returns. He retired to
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, in 1951, where he was a research associate at Caltech. He returned to Providence in 1963. After retirement he consulted for industry and the federal government. Cady held more than 50 patents, and was the inventor of the crystal-controlled oscillator, the highly selective narrow-band
crystal filter A crystal filter allows some frequencies to 'pass' through an electrical circuit while attenuating undesired frequencies. An electronic filter can use quartz crystals as resonator components of a filter circuit. Quartz crystals are piezoelectric ...
, one of the principal theorists of the ferroelectricity in crystals, and a historian of the science of piezoelectric crystals.Walter G. Cady, ''Piezoelectricity'' (New York and London: McGraw-Hill, 1946). He won the 1928
IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award The initially called Morris Liebmann Memorial Prize provided by the Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE), the IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award was created in 1919 in honor of Colonel Morris N. Liebmann. It was initially given to awardees who h ...
, and in 1936 was the second American to receive the Duddell Medal and Prize of the Physical Society of London. He received honorary degrees from Brown University in 1938, and from Wesleyan in 1958. His papers are archived at the Smithsonian Institution and the Rhode Island Historical Society.


Footnotes


References

* Mason, Warren P., "Professor Walter G. Cady's contributions to piezoelectricity and what followed from them", ''The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America'', Volume 58, Issue 2, August 1975, pages 301-309.
"Walter G. Cady and Piezoelectric Resonators", Proceedings of the IEEE Vol. 80, No. 11 November 1992

Lemelson Center oral history interview





Smithsonian Institution archive entry

IEEE Ultrasonics, Ferroelectrics, and Frequency Control Society memorial proceedings


* Shaul Katzir, "From ultrasonic to frequency standards : Walter Cady’s discovery of the sharp resonance of crystals. " Archive for History of Exact Sciences 62 (5 2008

* Shaul Katzir "War and peacetime research on the road to crystal frequency control. " Technology and culture 51 (1 2010


External links


Oral History interview transcript with Walter Cady on 28 August 1963, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives
- Session I
Oral History interview transcript with Walter Cady on 29 August 1963, American Institute of Physics, Niels Bohr Library & Archives
- Session II {{DEFAULTSORT:Cady, Walter Guyton American physicists Wesleyan University faculty 1874 births 1974 deaths Brown University alumni