US patent office honours Indian-born Stanford don A.J. Paulraj

IANS  |  Bengaluru 

The US and Trademark Office (USPTO) has inducted Indian-born Emeritus Professor Arogyaswami Joseph into its for developing to transmit and receive data at high speeds, the agency of the said on Monday.

"Paulraj, 73, has been inducted into the for his pioneering work on developing to transmit and receive data at high speeds," the agency said in an e-mail to IANS from Washington,

The agency awarded a in 1992 for inventing Multiple In-Multiple Out (MIMO), which enables transfer of data, including videos through like 4G and the upcoming 5G.

"We honour people responsible for the greatest technological advances that make human, social and economic progress possible," noted the agency.

The Office will formally induct at a special ceremony on May 3 in

Though the agency honoured five other Indian-origin scientists in the past, joins eight other world famed inventors in the field, who were inducted into the Hall of Fame.

"I feel humbled to be counted among the inventors who have made the modern world possible. When I joined Stanford in 1992, I had not worked in wireless technology, as my prior years in were spent on sonar systems," said in an e-mail to IANS from

The other Indian holding a for breakthrough work in radio and optics was Jagdish (1858-1937) in the 1890s.

"It was perhaps being an outsider helped me come up with this transformative idea. Like other breakthroughs, though MIMO faced scepticism, it took off and is the foundation of all wireless systems," recalled

The other eight inducted into the Hall of Fame are Guglielmo Marconi and (wireless telegraph), (AM radio), (FM radio), (Cellular technology), and (CDMA-3G) and

The other five Indian scientists honoured in the past in other fields C. K.

N. Patel (CO2 laser), Jayant Baliga (insulated gate bipolar transistor), (automotive exhaust catalyst), (ultraviolet water sanitation) and Rangaswami Srinivasan (Lasik eye surgery).

"MIMO as a transmitter and receiver in a to boost The 4G and the next-generation 5G will not be possible without MIMO Technology," said.

Set up in 1791, the USPTO has issued 8.8 million patents since the mid-20th century but inducted so far only 561 inventors, including Thomas Edison, the Wright Brothers, and founder

Born at Pollachi in Tamil Nadu, joined the when he was just 15 years. Impressed with his academic record, the sent him to the (IIT) in New Delhi, where he earned a doctorate (PhD) for advances to signal filtering theory.

After a 25-year service in the Navy, went to the US in 1992 to work at Stanford and built a MIMO-based cellular that became the basis for WiMax and LTE (Long-Term Evolution) mobile networks.

holds 79 patents and won many distinctions, including the 2011 IEEE Medal and 2014 Marconi Prize and Fellowship.

The Indian also honoured with Padma Bhushan, the third highest civilian award in 2010.

The NDA appointed the septuagenarian in December 2017 as of the to prepare a vision, mission, goal and roadmap for 5G 2020.

"The Department has asked me to support its efforts to advance the applications and internal value addition in 5G wireless. I always felt that needs to join the club of countries like the US, China, Europe, and that dominate communications and computing technology," added

(Fakir Balaji can be contacted at fakir.b@ians.in)

--IANS

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First Published: Mon, January 29 2018. 14:54 IST