Arthur E. Bryson
0 sources
Arthur E. Bryson
Summary
Arthur E. Bryson is a human[1]. He worked as a scientist[2], academic[3], university teacher[4], aerospace engineer[5], and astronautical engineer[6]. He ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (52 views/month, #7,288 of 1,000,298).[7]
Key Facts
- Arthur E. Bryson held citizenship in United States[8].
- Arthur E. Bryson worked as a scientist[2].
- Arthur E. Bryson's professions included academic[3].
- Arthur E. Bryson worked as a university teacher[4].
- Arthur E. Bryson worked as an aerospace engineer[5].
- Arthur E. Bryson's professions included astronautical engineer[6].
- Arthur E. Bryson's field of work was control theory[9].
- Arthur E. Bryson's field of work was aeronautics[10].
- Arthur E. Bryson's field of work was astronautics[11].
- Arthur E. Bryson was employed by Stanford University[12].
- Arthur E. Bryson's doctoral advisor was Hans W. Liepmann[13].
- Arthur E. Bryson received the Daniel Guggenheim Medal[14].
- Arthur E. Bryson received the Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award[15].
- Arthur E. Bryson received the John R. Ragazzini Education Award[16].
- Arthur E. Bryson received the Rufus Oldenburger Medal[17].
- Arthur E. Bryson is recorded as male[18].
- Arthur E. Bryson's instance of is recorded as human[19].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised Yu-Chi Ho as a doctoral student[20].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised Jason L. Speyer as a doctoral student[21].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised Stuart Dreyfus as a doctoral student[22].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised Laurent El Ghaoui as a doctoral student[23].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised Donald Edwards Johansen as a doctoral student[24].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised John Jacob Deyst, Jr. as a doctoral student[25].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised J. Karl Hedrick as a doctoral student[26].
- Arthur E. Bryson supervised Uy-Loi Ly as a doctoral student[27].
Body
Education
Arthur E. Bryson's doctoral advisor was Hans W. Liepmann[13].
Career and Affiliations
Recorded occupations include scientist[2], academic[3], university teacher[4], aerospace engineer[5], and astronautical engineer[6]. Fields of work include control theory[9], a branch of engineering[28]; aeronautics[10], a branch of science[29]; and astronautics[11], a branch of science[30]. Arthur E. Bryson was employed by Stanford University[12]. Doctoral students include Yu-Chi Ho[20], a mathematician[31], b. 1934[32], of People's Republic of China[33], awarded the Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award[34]; Jason L. Speyer[21], an engineer[35], awarded the Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award[36]; Stuart Dreyfus[22], an engineer[37]; Laurent El Ghaoui[23], an engineer[38], specialised in deep learning[39]; Donald Edwards Johansen[24]; and John Jacob Deyst, Jr.[25].
Recognition
Awards received include Daniel Guggenheim Medal[14], a science award[40], in United States[41], founded in 1928[42]; Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award[15], an award[43]; John R. Ragazzini Education Award[16], an award[44], in United States[45], founded in 1979[46]; and Rufus Oldenburger Medal[17], an award[47], in United States[48], founded in 1968[49].
Why It Matters
Arthur E. Bryson ranks in the top 0.73% of human entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (52 views/month, #7,288 of 1,000,298).[7]
His notable doctoral advisees include Laurent El Ghaoui[50], an engineer[51], specialised in deep learning[52].
FAQs
What did Arthur E. Bryson do for work?
Arthur E. Bryson worked as scientist[2], academic[3], university teacher[4], aerospace engineer[5], and astronautical engineer[6].
What awards did Arthur E. Bryson receive?
Honors received include Daniel Guggenheim Medal[14], Richard E. Bellman Control Heritage Award[15], John R. Ragazzini Education Award[16], and Rufus Oldenburger Medal[17].