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James T. Russell (born 1931) is an American inventor. He earned a BA in physics from Reed College in Portland in 1953. He joined General Electric 's nearby labs in Richland, Washington , where he initiated many types of experimental instrumentation.
While working at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, James Russell invented an optical storage system for digital audio and video, patenting the concept in 1970. [4] The earliest patents by Russell, US 3,501,586, and 3,795,902 were filed in 1966, and 1969. respectively. [5] [6] He built prototypes, and the first was operating in 1973.
James Russell (inventor) (born 1931), American inventor; James A. Russell (born 1947), American psychologist; James Russell III, atmospheric scientist; James Russell (ecologist), New Zealand biologist and professor; James Burn Russell (1837–1904), Scottish doctor, Glasgow's first Medical Officer of Health, Chief Medical Officer for Scotland
James T. Russell may refer to: James Russell (inventor) (born 1931), American inventor James T. Russell (politician) (1927–2006), member of the Florida House of Representatives
American inventor James T. Russell was also credited with designing and building the first electron-beam welder. [3] [4] [5] Electron-beam welder Deep narrow weld.
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The judges included agricultural scientist Chris Russell, CSIRO engineer James Bradfield Moody, designer Alison Page, futurist Mark Pesce, science broadcaster and microbiologist Bernie Hobbs, woodworker Richard Vaughan, designer and inventor Sally Dominguez, materials scientist Veena Sahajwalla, journalist and inventor Christine Kininmonth and ...
Russell and Sigurd Varian of Stanford University are generally considered to be the inventors. Their prototype was completed in August 1937. [279] 1937 Cyclamate. Cyclamate is an artificial sweetener 30–50 times sweeter than sugar, making it the least potent of the commercially used artificial sweeteners.