Frederick Kantor

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Frederick W. Kantor
Inventions
InstitutionsColumbia University
Doctoral advisorRobert Novick
Other academic advisorsPolykarp Kusch

Frederick Kantor (July 19, 1942 – May 15, 2020

fine structure constant
(on the scale of the very small) and cosmological red shift (on the scale of the very large)".[5]

Internet hoax involving an apparently chance meeting of Kantor and hundreds of Reddit followers at 6½ Avenue in Manhattan on July 12, 2012; the crowd was eventually dispersed by the New York Police Department.[7][8]

Early life and education

Kantor earned his B.A. and Ph.D. from Columbia University.[9] For his doctoral thesis, he invented a way to polish the surfaces of an X-ray telescope.

Inventions

In addition to his efforts in digital physics Kantor holds numerous patents.

electronic bulletin board operators to identify duplicates.[citation needed
]

X-ray telescope

However, the invention with potentially greatest impact at present is his earliest work on "Glancing-incidence radiation focusing device having a plurality of members with tension-polished reflecting surfaces". This patent, available at Google patents [11] clearly shows the concentric glancing incidence design for X-ray collection. Kantor's innovation, the use of surface tension to achieve a super-smooth reflecting surface is at the heart of the proposed NASA Lynx Observatory,[12] which describes the same physical process as "grazing incidence.". Kantor's work, part of his doctoral project at Columbia University, was supported in part by government funding. It was done prior to the Bayh–Dole Act, and Columbia did not seek any patent rights. Subsequent to his patents, designs for a NASA project were developed later by Lockheed Corporation, asserting government use rights to apply the invention. Whether the Lynx observatory will be implemented remains an open question.

Personal life and family

Kantor died May 15, 2020.[3] His brother, Paul B. Kantor.[9], is professor emeritus of Information Science at Rutgers University.[13]

Bibliography

  • Kantor, Frederick W. (1977). Information Mechanics.
    OCLC 869307439
    .
  • Kantor, F. W. (June 1982), "An informal partial overview of information mechanics",
  • "New X‐Ray Telescope is Sensitive, Light and Cheap",

References

  1. ^ "Photos from Alumni Reunion Weekend and Dean's Day – Class of 1964", Columbia College Today, Columbia University, Summer 2014, retrieved 2017-12-17
  2. ^ Kantor, Frederick W. (1974), A brief introduction to information mechanics (PDF), archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-06-15 – via Gravity Research Foundation
  3. ^ a b "Frederick Kantor obituary". The New York Times. May 19, 2020 – via Legacy.com.
  4. ^ Ray Kurzweil (2005), The Singularity Is Near: When Humans Transcend Biology, Penguin,
  5. ^ Sverdlik, Daniel I. (February 1989), "Maximum mass-particle velocities in Kantor's information mechanics",
    S2CID 122242896
  6. .
  7. ^ Matt Silverman, "The Chosen One: Meet the Man Who Sparked the Reddit Mystery", Mashable
  8. New York Observer
  9. ^ a b "Obituaries". Columbia College Today. 2020-09-18. Retrieved 2022-07-23.
  10. ^ Kantor Patents at Justia.com
  11. ^ Glancing-incidence radiation focusing device having a plurality of members with tension-polished reflecting surfaces (PDF)
  12. ^ [NASA] Lynx X-ray Observatory
  13. ^ Paul Kantor faculty page, Rutgers University official website, accessed February 25, 2023