John Fitzallen Moore

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John Fitzallen Moore (February 23, 1928 – January 31, 2018) was an American physicist, the son of authors Virginia Moore and Louis Untermeyer. His last name was legally changed after his parents' divorce. His work in military electronics, communications, and spectroscopy culminated in medical electronics and x-ray products with the founding of the company Bio-Imaging Research.[1]

Early life

After attending schools in

Harvard
's School of Applied Science.

Professional career

His first full-time employment was at Raytheon in Waltham, Massachusetts, where he worked on radar and telemetry. At Hycon Eastern (Cambridge, Massachusetts; later acquired by Northrop), he moved from classified missile technology to become Systems Manager of a communications design office in Bangkok, Thailand. On his return, he again worked in aircraft and missile telemetry as Director of Research and Engineering at ASCOP (Princeton, New Jersey; later a division of EMR/Schlumberger).

In 1960, he joined

moon-bounce" communication systems and optical signal processors, and creating an infrared laboratory and corporate acquisition analysis. While there, he was appointed to the Lockheed Corporate Research Council, and also attended Columbia University in New York half-time. For the latter, his Ph.D. thesis[2] proved experimentally that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere of Venus has enough greenhouse effect
to warm its surface to the spacecraft-observed temperature of over 460 °C (860 °F).

After receiving his doctorate, Moore created new designs in spectroscopy and

MRI, ultrasound, and industrial x-ray scanners, including the megavolt x-ray systems that inspect trucks and cargo containers at ports and border crossings. He was awarded the Chicago Area High-Tech Entrepreneur of the Year in 1987 and 1989. In 2006, he sold BIR's medical division to Toshiba Medical, and in 2007 sold its industrial and security divisions to Varian Medical Systems
.

Moore served on several standards committees for medical imaging, and was Chairman of the Surface Weapons Board of the U.S. Naval Research Advisory Committee. He has published and presented numerous papers, including before the World Health Organization in Geneva. He retired after 27 years on the board of TC Manufacturing, and consulted in medical and radiation physics until passing away in 2018.

Personal life

He had five children (Robin [deceased], Sheila, Marjorie, Deborah [deceased], and Laurel) by his first marriage in 1948 to Joan Elizabeth Sanders (1928–1998), and two children (

Cris Moore
) by his second marriage in 1963 to Betty-Ann Jorgensen (1938- ). He collected original-cast musical comedy recordings and license plates, and his other interests included N-scale model railroading, mathematical games, and science fiction.

Patents

Moore's patents[3] include:

  • 2,742,639 Signal comparison systems
  • 2,746,032 Tracking control system
  • 3,600,594 Fiber optics pulse width modulator
  • 4,181,858 Adjustable compensating device for radiographic apparatus
  • 4,185,195 Construction of collimators and/or detectors for penetrating radiation
  • 4,222,104 Radiography
  • 4,504,962 Computerized tomography
  • 4,641,119 Laminar magnet for magnetic resonance device and method of making same
  • 4,672,208 Particle detector crystal and related particle detector assembly
  • 4,717,962 Method for compressing and reconstructing a data representation of a picture
  • 4,733,082 Gamma ray camera methods and apparatus employing cooled scintillation crystal
  • 4,969,165 Automatic dynamic focusing for computed tomography
  • 4,984,257 Automatic dynamic focusing for computed tomography
  • 4,989,225 CAT scanner with simultaneous translation and rotation of objects
  • 5,010,254 System for communicating energy between relatively moving devices
  • 5,661,774 Dual energy power supply
  • 6,463,122 Mammography of computer tomography for imaging and therapy
  • 6,683,935 Computed tomography with virtual tilt and angulation
  • 6,785,357 High energy x-ray mobile cargo inspection system with penumbra collimator
  • 7,133,491 Traveling x-ray inspection system with collimators
  • 7,486,761 Computed tomography facilitation method and apparatus
  • 8,053,745 Device and method for administering particle beam therapy

Pending:

  • Method... to facilitate formation of a two-dimensional image using x-ray fan beam scatter

References

  1. ^ "John Fitzallen Moore". Chicago Suburban Daily. Retrieved February 21, 2018.
  2. . Retrieved October 4, 2014.
  3. ^ "Patent Fetcher - Patent Fetcher - Pay As You Go Patent PDFs". Retrieved October 4, 2014.