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Akira Hasegawa was born on 17 June, 1934 in Tokyo, Japan. Discover Akira Hasegawa's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 89 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 90 years old
Zodiac Sign Gemini
Born 17 June 1934
Birthday 17 June
Birthplace Tokyo, Japan
Nationality Japan

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 17 June. He is a member of famous with the age 90 years old group.

Akira Hasegawa Height, Weight & Measurements

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Akira Hasegawa Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Akira Hasegawa worth at the age of 90 years old? Akira Hasegawa’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Japan. We have estimated Akira Hasegawa's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

2010

Hasegawa's proposal to trap plasmas with a dipole magnet similar to Earth's magnetic field, where turbulence caused by solar wind stabilizes the trap, was implemented in the first dipole plasma experiment at University of Tokyo by Prof. Zensho Yoshida. In 2010, a plasma experiment with a floating dipole was also built at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

1996

Domestically, Hasegawa has received several awards including, the 1996 C&C Prize, 1996 Achievement Prize of the Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers (Japan), 1993 Shida Rinzaburo Prize (Japanese Ministry of Post and Telecommunications) and the 1995 Hattori (Seiko) Houkou Prize. He also has the honor of receiving the 2008 Japan Academy Prize, and in 2010 The Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold Rays with Neck Ribbon from the Japanese Emperor.

1991

In September 1991, Hasegawa took a position of Professor of Communications Engineering in the Faculty of Engineering at Osaka University and started a new group of optical soliton based communication systems. He established international as well as domestic research groups that concentrated on ultra-high speed communications based on optical solitons. The group successfully demonstrated soliton based, all-optical ultra high speed communication over inter-continental distances. A student during this period, Toshihiko Hirooka now works as a professor at Tohoku University.

Hasegawa is a Fellow of IEEE and the American Physical Society. Internationally, he has been recognized as a recipient of the 1991 Rank Prize (British), 1995 Moet Hennessy, Louis Vuitton Da Vinci of Excellence Prize (French), 1999 IEEE/LEOS Quantum Electronics Award, and the 2000 James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics of the American Physical Society. In his citation, his innovative discoveries and fundamental contributions to the theory of turbulence of nonlinear drift waves, the spread of Alfvén waves in the laboratory and in space plasma, as well as optical solitons and their application in telecommunications were highlighted. He also shared with Kuniaki Mima and Pat Diamond the 2011 European Physical Society Hannes Alfvén Prize.

1987

Hasegawa and Liu Chen succeeded in explaining the earth's magnetic oscillation mechanism (now known as the Chen–Hasegawa resonance) which was observed by his colleague, Louis J. Lanzerotti. This work also lead them to discover a new wave now called the kinetic Alfvén wave that resolved the magnetohydrodynamic singularity. A Bell Labs team of Cliff Surko (Professor at University of California, San Diego) and Richart E. Slusher (Georgia Tech) discovered low frequency plasma turbulence by laser scattering in the Princeton plasma machine. Hasegawa with Kunioki Mima derived a two dimensional nonlinear wave equation that describes the observed turbulence spectra. This equation, now called the Hasegawa–Mima equation, is widely used as the fundamental equation to describe low frequency plasma turbulence. One unique property of the equation is the existence of an inverse cascade of turbulent spectra which may form coherent structures such as zonal flow in the azimuthal direction in cylindrical plasmas. Hasegawa with Masahiro Wakatani extended the equation to the realistic geometry of plasmas confined in a toroidal magnetic field (Hasegawa–Wakatani equation) and demonstrated the universal excitation of zonal flow as the consequence of turbulence. To meet the needs of the high pressure confinement for advanced fusion fuel such as deuterium-helium-3, in 1987 Hasegawa proposed a plasma confinement by a dipole magnetic field generated by floating superconducting ring current. Devices based on this idea were built at University of Tokyo by a research group headed by Professor Z. Yoshida and by MIT and Columbia University team led by Professors J. Kesner and M.E. Mauel, and successful high pressure plasma confinements were demonstrated.

1973

Hasegawa was the first to suggest the existence of optical solitons in 1973. In 1974, he (together with Liu Chen) showed that plasmas could be heated with the kinetic Alfvén wave. Hasegawa and Chen introduced the concept of the kinetic Alfven wave to illustrate the microscopic process of the Alfven wave heating. In 1977, Hasegawa introduced the Hasegawa–Mima equation to describe turbulence in Tokamak plasmas and then further developed it in the 1980s (with Masahiro Wakatani) to obtain the Hasegawa-Wakatani equation. The equation predicted an inverse cascade in the turbulent energy spectrum (i.e. from small to large wavelengths) and zonal flows (in the azimuthal direction in the Tokamak) that can control radial turbulent diffusion. With Wakatani, he wrote a paper on self-organized turbulence in plasmas.

1968

He rejoined Bell Laboratories in 1968, where he stayed as a distinguished member of technical staff until 1991. During his time at Bell Laboratories, he also became an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Applied Physics at Columbia University from 1971. He was a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in 1980 as well as a Visiting Professor at the Institute of Laser Engineering at Osaka University. Hasegawa was elected as Chairman of the Division of Plasma Physics of the American Physical Society in 1990, when he reported to the President the importance of fusion research based on advanced fuels to avoid undesirable consequences of deuterium tritium fusion. In 1991, he resigned from Bell Laboratories and transferred to the Faculty of Engineering at Osaka University. He retired in 1998.

In 1968, while at Bell Laboratories, Hasegawa joined a group in charge of space plasmas. His first theoretical work was to show that the observed oscillation on a satellite in the earth's magnetosphere can be explained by an excitation of mirror instability coupled with a drift wave mode and named it the drift mirror instability. This has become a pioneering work in space plasma instabilities. In 1973, while he was working on studies of the nonlinear evolution of Whistler wave envelope, he discovered the same equation, the nonlinear Schrödinger equation, applied to the envelope of light pulses in glass fibers. With the help of computer simulation undertaken in collaboration with Fred Tappert, he demonstrated transmission of a stable nonlinear optical pulse in fiber, which was later to be known as the optical soliton. The experimental verification of existence of the optical soliton was first made by L. F. Mollenauer et al of Bell Laboratories in 1980. The nonlinear Schrödinger equation is now widely used for simulation of optical signal transfer in fibers over inter-continental distances and not solely limited to solitons.

1964

Akira Hasegawa is a graduate of the Department of Communications Engineering at Osaka University, Japan and was a Fulbright student at the University of California, Berkeley, where he completed his Ph.D. under the supervision of Charles K. Birdsall in 1964. The title of his dissertation was Plasma Computer Simulation Using Sheet Current Model.

He subsequently took a post doctoral position at Bell Laboratories for six month, where he worked with Solomon J. Buchsbaum. Hasegawa was an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Engineering Science of Osaka University from 1964 to 1968. During this period, he served as a visiting professor at the Institute of Plasma Physics at Nagoya University and received the Doctor of Science Degree from the Department of Physics at Nagoya University.

1961

In March 1961, prior to moving to the United States, Hasegawa was married to Miyoko, his current wife. Together, they have two sons, Tomohiro and Atsushi, and a daughter, Akiko. He plays tennis but now mostly enjoys playing golf. Akira currently enjoys being a member of the Rotary Club of Kyoto-East and publishing books on various non-science themes including history, finance, and culture. He believes that Japan is a country established on a unique matriarchal culture during the Jomon period, some ten thousands of years BC.

1934

Akira Hasegawa (Japanese: 長谷川晃, Hepburn: Hasegawa Akira, born June 17, 1934 in Tokyo Prefecture) is a theoretical physicist and engineer who has worked in the US and Japan. He is known for his work in the derivation of the Hasegawa–Mima equation, which describes fundamental plasma turbulence and the consequent generation of zonal flow that controls plasma diffusion. Hasegawa also made the discovery of optical solitons in glass fibers, a concept that is essential for high speed optical communications.