Emmett N. Leith Medal
Get Involved
- Optica on Ukraine
- Awards & Honors
- Diversity, Equity & Inclu...
- Early Career Professional...
- Education Outreach
- Global Policy & Affairs
- Local Section
- Virtual Engagement
- Students
-
Technical Groups
- Bio-Medical Optics
- Fabrication, Design and Instrumentation
- Information Acquisition, Processing, Display and Perception
- Optical Interaction Science
- Photonics and Opto-Electronics
- Quantum
- Sensing
- Technical Group Leadership Volunteers
- Technical Group Webinars
- Technical Group Search
- Technical Group Prizes
- Simulight Optics Challenge
- Volunteer
- Optica on Ukraine
- Awards & Honors
- Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
- Early Career Professionals
- Education Outreach
- Global Policy & Affairs
- Local Section
- Virtual Engagement
- Students
-
Technical Groups
- Bio-Medical Optics
- Fabrication, Design and Instrumentation
- Information Acquisition, Processing, Display and Perception
- Optical Interaction Science
- Photonics and Opto-Electronics
- Quantum
- Sensing
- Technical Group Leadership Volunteers
- Technical Group Webinars
- Technical Group Search
- Technical Group Prizes
- Simulight Optics Challenge
- Volunteer
Emmett N. Leith Medal
The medal was established in 2006 to honor Emmett N. Leith, a world-renowned scientist in holography and optical information processing.
Society Connection
Emmett N. Leith was a member of the Society from 1961 and served on several committees. A Fellow, he also received the Frederic Ives Medal/Jarus W. Quinn Prize, William F. Meggers Award and R. W. Wood Prize. Additionally, Leith and his coworker Juris Upatnieks displayed the world's first three-dimensional hologram at a Society conference in 1964.
Key Funders
General Dynamics, University of Michigan College of Engineering, Physical Optics Corporation, Alexander Sawchuk, Joseph Goodman, James R. Fienup, G. Michael Morris, Tom Cathey, James Wyant
About Emmett N. Leith
Leith was born 12 March 1927 in Detroit, MI, USA. He attended Wayne State University where he received a BS in Physics in 1949. He continued at Wayne State and received a Master’s degree in physics in 1952 and a PhD in electrical engineering in 1978.
Leith was a pioneer of coherent optics in radar systems and is credited with developing modern holography in the early 1960s. His research began at the Radar Laboratory of the University of Michigan’s Willow Run Laboratory in 1952. Before holography, his research focused on synthetic aperture radar. In 1955, he joined the University of Michigan as a research assistant. He became a research associate in 1956, a research engineer in 1960, associate professor in 1965 and full professor in 1968.
Leith and his coworker Juris Upatnieks displayed the world's first three-dimensional hologram at a Society conference in 1964.
In addition to the 1985 Frederic Ives Medal/Jarus W. Quinn Prize, Leith received the 1960 IEEE Morris N. Liebmann Memorial Award and the 1969 Stuart Ballantine Medal. In 1979, he received the National Medal of Science from President Jimmy Carter. He died 23 December 2005 at the age of 78 in Ann Arbor, MI, USA.