Herbert Bristol Dwight
Herbert Bristol Dwight (8 September 1885, Geneva, Illinois – 30 June 1975) was an American-Canadian electrical engineer.[1]
Dwight was educated in elementary and secondary schools in Ontario, attended Toronto University for two years, and then attended McGill University, graduating there in 1909 with a B.Sc. in electrical engineering. He developed a method for calculating the skin effect resistance ratio of a tubular conductor[1][2] and derived formulas for mutual inductance of coils with parallel axes, repulsion of coils with parallel axes, and self-inductance of long cylindrical coils.[3]
Selected publications
- Transmission line formulas for electrical engineers and engineering students. Constable & co. 1913.
- Constant-voltage transmission; a discussion of the use of synchronous motors for eliminating variation in voltage in electric power systems. Wiley. 1915.
- Transmission line formulas; a collection of methods of calculation for the electrical design of transmission lines. D. Van Nostrand company. 1925.
- Tables of integrals and other mathematical data. A series of mathematical texts. The Macmillan company. 1934.
- Electrical coils and conductors, their electrical characteristics and theory. 1945.
- Electrical elements of power transmission lines. 1954.
References
- "Dwight, Herbert Bristol". Who's Who in Engineering: A Biographical Dictionary of Contemporaries 1922–1923. Vol. 1. 1922. p. 394.
- Dwight, Herbert B. (1918). "Skin effect in tubular and flat conductors". American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Transactions of the. 37 (2): 1379–1403. doi:10.1109/T-AIEE.1918.4765575. S2CID 51636838.
- Dwight, H. B. (1919). "Some new formulas for reactance coils". American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Transactions of the. 38 (2): 1675–1696. doi:10.1109/T-AIEE.1919.4765652. S2CID 51653896.
- Dwight, H. B. "A new formula for use in calculating repulsion of coaxial coils" (PDF). In: Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians in Toronto, August 11–16. 1924. Vol. 2. pp. 461–464.
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