Michel G. Malti

Michel George Malti (November 7, 1895 - May 1978) was an American electrical engineer, known for his work in circuit analysis. He was born in Deir el Qamar, in modern-day Lebanon and died in Miami, Florida.[1][2] He graduated from the Syrian Protestant college (1915) and from Georgia Tech (1922), before joining Cornell University as an instructor and student, earning a M.Sc. (1924) and Ph.D. (1927), all degrees in electrical engineering.[3]

He continued to serve as research assistant and faculty member in civil engineering and as a professor in electrical engineering until his retirement (1962), spending sabbaticals at the University of Puerto Rico (1947) and the University of Roorkee in India (1955–57).[3] In 1939 Malti and Fritz Herzog solved an important electric power problem on balancing dynamos, which had remained unsolved since the days of Michael Faraday a century before.[4][5] He later supervised research on 3D-modeling of Eddy currents.[6] Malti was an IEEE Fellow.

Works

  • Circuit analysis (Wiley, 1930). Translated into Russian.

Notes

  1. Winfield Scott Downs (1947). Who's Who in New York (City and State). Bloomington. p. 672. Retrieved 2008-06-23.
  2. "Social Security Death Index Interactive Search".
  3. "Professor Michel Malti Due to Retire in July". Cornell Daily Sun. 8 June 1962. p. 5. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 2011-07-13.
  4. "DYNAMO 'BALANCE' FOUND AT CORNELL; Problem Left by Faraday Is Solved ..." New York Times. 13 March 1939. Retrieved 2008-06-27.
  5. "Cornell Scientists Find New Way to 'Balance' Dynamos". Washington Post. 13 March 1939. Retrieved 2008-06-27.
  6. Malti, Michel G.; Ramakumar, R. (October 1963). "Three-Dimensional Theory of the Eddy-Current Coupling". IEEE Transactions on Power Apparatus and Systems. 82 (68): 793–800. doi:10.1109/TPAS.1963.291410.
gollark: It means it's returning a table, and `tostring` which I believe `print` uses internally doesn't actually print their contents.
gollark: Though that will create a trailing space and comma.
gollark: Assuming you meant `"five"` instead of `"5"`, simple enough I think:```lualocal out = ""for ix, v in pairs(name_of_that_table) do out = out .. ("%d %s, "):format(ix, v)endreturn out```
gollark: Like globals, but more so.
gollark: Try potatOS's superglobals!
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.