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  1. Dr Harry Ferdinand Olson, E.E., Ph.D. (December 28, 1901 – April 1, 1982) was a prominent engineer and inventor with RCA Victor, the Acoustic Research Director of RCA Laboratories, Princeton, and a pioneer in the field of 20th century acoustical engineering [1] notably in the fields of high-fidelity, digital music synthesis ...

  2. 27 de ene. de 2016 · Biography. Harry F. Olson, a pioneer in the field of 20th century acoustical engineering, was born in Mt. Pleasant, Iowa to Swedish immigrant parents. Technically inclined from an early age, Olson went on to earn a bachelor's degree in Electrical Engineering and a doctorate in Physics from the University of Iowa.

  3. American engineer. Learn about this topic in these articles: history of music synthesizer. In music synthesizer. …by the American acoustical engineers Harry Olson and Herbert Belar in 1955 at the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) laboratories at Princeton, New Jersey. The information was fed to the synthesizer encoded on a punched paper tape.

  4. HARRY F. OLSON. December 28, 1901-April 1, 1982. BY CYRIL M. HARRIS. HARRY. F. OLSON, pioneer in acoustics and electronic sound recording, died on April 1, 1982, at Princeton Medical Center at the age of eighty-one. He had been a mem-ber of the National Academy of Sciences since 1959.

  5. 26 de ene. de 2021 · About Harry F. Olson. Harry Olson, a pioneer in musical sound reproduction, received his B.E. degree from the University of Iowa in 1924. He continued his graduate studies at Iowa, taking a masters in 1925 and a Ph.D. in atomic physics in 1928.

  6. Bio. Harry Olson was born in Pontiac, Illinois, in 1931. He believes the hardships he faced as a child during the Great Depression forced him to become a survivor. At age eighteen, he grew tired of bouncing between farm jobs. He made the choice to enlist in the military and let the United States Army raise him.

  7. El efecto Line Array de la reducción de la dispersión vertical con incremento de la horizontal se demostró por primera vez en 1957 por Harry Olson un pionero en la acústica, que publicó sus conclusiones en el texto Ingeniería Acústica.