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News Releases
August 29,
2002
Media Contact: Doug Ramsey (858)
822-5825 dramsey@ucsd.edu
UCSD'S
H. NEAL BERTRAM WINS IEEE AWARD FOR
ADVANCES IN MAGNETIC RECORDING RESEARCH
UCSD professor H. Neal
Bertram, a leading researcher in the field of recording physics and micromagnetics,
has won the 2003 IEEE Reynold B. Johnson Information Storage Award. The
prize is awarded each year for outstanding achievement in the field of
information storage, mainly computer storage. Bertram was cited for "fundamental
and pioneering contributions to magnetic recording physics research."
"I am very pleased that the IEEE has chosen to honor me in this way,"
said Bertram, a professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at UCSD's
Jacobs School of Engineering. "I will accept it in the name of my
colleagues who have contributed so much to the fundamental work we are
all doing on the physics of magnetic recording."
Bertram holds an endowed chair in UCSD's Center for Magnetic Recording
Research. "This honor is richly deserved because Neal has helped
pave the way for continuing improvements in magnetic storage devices,"
said CMRR director Paul Siegel. "If we are going to continue doubling
the capacity of hard disk drives every year, we first need to understand
the physics." Bertram's research includes modeling the thermal instability
that occurs as device makers try to pack more bits into smaller areasa
massive computational exercise on which he has teamed up with the San
Diego Supercomputer Center, where he is a Fellow.
The IEEE Reynold B. Johnson Information Storage Award was established
by the IEEE in 1991 as part of its Technical Field Awards program. The
award is sponsored by IBM, in honor of a pioneer of magnetic disk technology:
Reynold Johnson, the founding manager (in 1952) of the IBM San Jose Research
and Engineering Laboratory, where IBM's storage research and development
was centered.
Neal Bertram earned his Ph.D. in physics from Harvard University in 1968.
From then until 1984, he worked for AMPEX Corporation. He joined the UCSD
faculty in 1985, and now leads CMRR's recording physics and micromagnetics
research. He is the author of a highly-regarded textbook entitled "Theory
of Magnetic Recording" (Cambridge University Press, 1994). Bertram
has been an IEEE Fellow since 1987. In 2000, he was the co-recipient (with
Seagate Research's Roy W. Gustafson) of the Technical Achievement Award
from the National Storage Industry Consortium for "modeling and system
simulations that supplied the insights needed to develop specifications
for a realizable 100Gb/sq.in. hard disk drive system."
Bertram becomes the second UCSD faculty member to win a 2003 IEEE Technical
Field Award (tying for first place with U.C. Berkeley for the number of
awards to a single institution). Also in August, ECE professor Peter Asbeck
won the David Sarnoff Award in electronics. He was cited for his "development
and applications of Gallium Arsenide (GaAs)-based heterojunction bipolar
transistors (HBTs)"one of the cornerstones of today's high-speed
electronics.
# # #
Photos: High-resolution photos
of Berman and Asbeck are downloadable from the Faculty & Students
section of the Image Gallery at http://www.jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/news_events/gallery/
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