Perry B. Wilson 1927 - 2013
Professor (Emeritus), Particle Physics and Astrophysics
PROFESSIONAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
- B.S. Physics, Washington State University, 1950
- M.S. Physics, Washington State University, 1952
- Ph.D Physics, Stanford University, 1958
- Research Associate, Stanford, 1957 - 1958
- Staff Physicist, Linfield Research Institute, McMinnville, Oregon, 1958 -
1959
- Research Associate, High Energy Physics Laboratory, Stanford University, 1959-1964
- Associate Director of Operations, High-Energy Physics Laboratory, Stanford,
1964 - 1968
- Senior Research Associate, High-Energy Physics Laboratory, Stanford, 1966 -
1969
- Senior Research Associate, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, 1969-1974
- Adjunct Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1974 -1983
- Scientific Associate, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 1977-1978 (on leave from Stanford University)
- Professor, SLAC, Stanford, 1983 - 1997
- Received 1991
IEEE Particle Accelerator Science and Technology Award, with
David Farkas, for invention of SLED, SLAC Energy Development radio-
frequency pulse compression system. (Article about SLED here, on
page 5)
- Professor (Emeritus), SLAC, Stanford, 1997 - 2013
- Received
50-year service award in February 2008
RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS AND PRESENTATIONS
- Perry B. wilson publications listed and linked in inSPIRE; and also in
Google Scholar
- Perry B. Wilson
inSPIRE Author Profile
-
SLAC-PUB-2884. HIGH ENERGY ELECTRON LINACS: APPLICATIONS TO STORAGE RING
RF SYSTEMS AND LINEAR COLLIDERS.
Perry B. Wilson. November 1991.
- ML-527. Notes on trajectory modulated microwave devices. Perry B. Wilson. June
1958. Stanford University, Ginzton Lab.
Archival Materials
Perry Wilson papers held by the SLAC Archives, History & Records Office are
currently being processed, and are not yet open for research. SLAC
staff may access descriptions of his papers by
clicking this link
and entering his last name in the search box at the upper right on that page. Perry B. Wilson papers held by Stanford
University are described online in the Guide to the Stanford University, Department of Physics, Oral Exam Questions
SC1167
Note: Some links on this page open pdf
files, which require the free Acrobat
Reader.
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