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- b. August 19, 1924, Amherst, Nova Scotia
-
- Retired, formerly Executive Director of Research, Communications Sciences
- Division, Bell Labs
-
- Boyle's family moved to Quebec, where he grew up in a log cabin and
- received no formal education until high school. He went on to earn a Ph.D.
- in physics from McGill University in 1950. Three years later, he joined
- Bell Laboratories. Boyle's major contributions include the first
- continuously operating ruby laser, which he invented with Don Nelson in
- 1962, and the first patent (with David Thomas) proposing a semiconductor
- injection laser. Also in 1962 he became director of Space Science and
- Exploratory Studies at Bellcomm, a Bell subsidiary providing technological
- support for the Apollo space program. In 1964 he returned to Bell Labs,
- switching from research to the development of electronic devices,
- particularly integrated circuits, which are now essential building blocks
- in telecommunications and electronics in general. In 1969, Boyle and George
- Smith invented the charge-coupled device (CCD). CCDs can be used as imaging
- devices, memories, filters and signal processors. They have revolutionized
- astronomy (the Hubble Space Telescope uses CCDs at its prime focus) and
- created entirely new industries (e.g., video cameras). For this invention,
- Boyle and Smith were joint recipients of the Franklin Institute's Stuart
- Ballantine Medal in 1973, and of IEEE's 1974 Morris Liebmann Award. In
- 1975, Boyle returned to research as Executive Director of Research (see
- above) for Bell Labs, where he was in charge of four laboratories until his
- retirement in 1979. He and his family divide their time between residences
- in a small fishing village near Halifax, Nova Scotia and Mount Tremblant,
- Quebec.
-
- Sources: personal communications.
-
- © 1996 Softshell Small Systems Software Design Inc.
- All rights reserved
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