Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

J. Edward Anderson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American engineer

John Edward Anderson (born May 15, 1927)[1] is an American engineer and proponent ofpersonal rapid transit.

Career

[edit]

Anderson was born inChina in the 1920s. His family returned to the United States in the 1930s. He obtained aBS fromIowa State University and amaster's from theUniversity of Minnesota - both in the field ofmechanical engineering. He also earned a Ph.D. in Astronautics from theMassachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1971, he became a full professor atUniversity of Minnesota and has been a professor of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering atBoston University.

Anderson is also a member of theAdvanced Transit Association board of Directors since its founding in 1976.[2] Anderson was elected in 2001 as Fellow of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science.[3]

Personal Rapid Transport

[edit]

He first worked on methods of structural analysis of supersonic-aircraft wings at the Structures Research Division of NACA (nowNASA), and later designed aircraft instruments, including the first transistorized amplifier used in a military aircraft for the Aeronautical Division ofHoneywell.[4]

In 1963 he joined the Mechanical Engineering Department at the University of Minnesota, and directed its Industrial Engineering Division. He chaired a symposium on the role of science and technology in society, coordinated a 15-professor task force on New Concepts in Urban Transportation, and chaired three international conferences onpersonal rapid transit (PRT), following which he was elected first president of ATRA.

Anderson consulted on PRT planning for many organizations, and for several years he was Distinguished Lecturer for theAmerican Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics. At one point, he discussed PRT with PresidentRichard Nixon's staff. Anderson reportedly said of Nixon, "[Nixon] didn’t know anything about it, but we spent quite a bit of time talking to his staff."[5]

Anderson was chosen as lead consultant to plan an automated transit system for Indianapolis, and selected the German-builtCabinentaxi—a three-person vehicle that travels below its elevated rail in one direction and on top of it in the other.Anderson was later hired by the German builder of Cabinentaxi to act as U.S. representative, until the company abandoned work on the idea.[6]

In 1983 Anderson co-founded Automated Transportation Systems, Inc., with two officials of the University of Minnesota. The company was renamed Taxi 2000 Corporation in 1986.[7]While teaching in the late 1980s at the Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering at Boston University, Anderson organized a team of engineers from major Boston-area firms to participate in developing the PRT system.

In 1989, the Northeastern IllinoisRTA initiated a program to fully develop PRT, leading to a $40M joint development program with Raytheon Company and the RTA. Massachusetts-based Raytheon purchased the rights to the Taxi 2000 technology in 1993 and developed its own version of the system concept, which it named "PRT 2000".[8][9]

Raytheon developed a PRT 2000 test track and produced three vehicles which were up and running in 1995 in Marlborough, Massachusetts in a joint project with the Northeastern Illinois RTA. However, Raytheon terminated the PRT 2000 project and Phase III was never started.[10]

Anderson became part of the effort by a committee of the business-civic groupForward Quest[1] to install a Taxi 2000-based PRT system, the Sky Loop, into the Cincinnati area. The Sky Loop plan was submitted to theOhio-Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of Governments (OKI), but the proposal was ultimately rejected by OKI's Central Area Loop Study Committee.[11][12][13]

In 2002, Anderson began selling shares in the privately held Taxi 2000,[14] and on April 10, 2003, he unveiled the Taxi 2000 (Skyweb Express) prototype to the public and the media.

Anderson also sought public funding for PRT research and development but bills to subsidize a testing facility for Taxi 2000 were never approved. On March 8, 2004, Anderson appeared at a meeting of the Midtown Greenway Coalition board to support a proposal for that project,[15] but in June 2004 the Midtown Greenway board endorsed a streetcar over his proposal.[16]

J. Edward Anderson left Taxi 2000 Corporation in 2005 to start a personal rapid transit consulting firm called *PRT International. He was sued by the Taxi 2000 Corporation in April of that year, alleging he had retained proprietary information from Taxi 2000, along with a company computer.[17] The suit was settled in December 2005.[18]

Arms Control

[edit]

Anderson was active in opposing deployment of theMX missile in new protective silos. Support for MX was based on claims by defense officials that a "window of vulnerability" existed in theMinuteman missile system—that theSoviet Union could achieve first-strike capability.[19] Alarmed at Defense SecretaryCaspar Weinberger's announcement that the U.S. intended to seek such capability for itself, Anderson believed that data showing danger of Soviet first-strike capability was greatly exaggerated.[20] He authored seven papers between 1979 and 1983 opposing MX, in which he maintained there was no "window of vulnerability," due to known margins of error in the reliability, accuracy and testing of missile systems.[21][22] He also founded a program called International Peace Issues Forum, for students to discuss arms control and disarmament issues.[23] As recently as 2004 the groupMinnesota Alliance of Peacemakers listed Anderson as a member ofCitizens for Global Solutions who is available to do public speaking on the subject of arms control.[24]

patents

[edit]

(selected chronological list)

References

[edit]
  1. ^Societies, American Association of Engineering (15 March 1991).Who's who in Engineering. Engineers Joint Council.ISBN 9780876150160 – via Google Books.
  2. ^"Advanced Transit Association (ATRA)". Advancedtransit.org. Archived fromthe original on March 1, 2009. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  3. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on February 6, 2012. RetrievedJune 6, 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^Anderson, J. Edward,"How Innovation can make Transit Self-Supporting,"Archived September 27, 2007, at theWayback Machine p.19. Prepared for The Conference of Georgist Organizations, July 19–23, 2006
  5. ^"The Rake: The Rakish Angle : The Future >> My Pod". Archived fromthe original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved2006-12-10.
  6. ^Boston University,"Will Taxi 2000 be the Rapid Transit of the Future?"Archived 2007-01-08 at theWayback Machine Bostonia, Jan.-Feb. 1988.
  7. ^"For Immediate Release". Faculty.washington.edu. Archived fromthe original on 2007-01-17. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  8. ^"Taxi 2000". Itdean.umn.edu. 2004-10-01. Archived fromthe original on 2010-06-13. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  9. ^"Response to "Personal Rapid Transit – Cyberspace Dream Keeps Colliding with Reality," found on www.lightrailnow.org"(PDF). 2004. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on February 10, 2012. RetrievedDecember 10, 2006.
  10. ^"Current Efforts". Faculty.washington.edu. 2001-05-11. Archived fromthe original on 2007-02-08. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  11. ^Central Area Loop StudyArchived May 13, 2012, at theWayback Machine
  12. ^"Central Area Loop Study (CALS) Ending".www.skyloop.org. Archived fromthe original on 2008-05-09.
  13. ^Driehaus, Bob (2001-09-26)."OKI rejects 'sky loop' elevated rail system".The Cincinnati Post.E. W. Scripps Company. Archived fromthe original on 2006-12-05.
  14. ^"Finance and Commerce". Archived fromthe original on 2003-06-27. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  15. ^"Midtown Greenway Coalition".midtowngreenway.org. Archived fromthe original on 25 May 2004. Retrieved17 January 2022.
  16. ^"Midtown Greenway Coalition".midtowngreenway.org. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved17 January 2022.
  17. ^Reilly, Mark (2005-06-17)."Funds to help Bioverse clean MN lakes - Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal". Twincities.bizjournals.com. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  18. ^"Get On Board|Taxi2000 News & Intel". Kinetic.seattle.wa.us. Archived fromthe original on 2009-02-17. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  19. ^"The MX Basing Debate: The Reagan Plan and Alternatives : UNT Digital Library"(PDF). Digital.library.unt.edu. 2 November 1981. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  20. ^"First Strike: Myth or Reality," The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 37:9 (1981):6-11
  21. ^"J. Edward Anderson: The Complete Bibliography". Kinetic.seattle.wa.us. Archived fromthe original on 2009-09-03. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  22. ^"War, Doctrine, and the Air War College". Airpower.maxwell.af.mil. Archived fromthe original on 2011-06-08. Retrieved2010-02-07.
  23. ^"First-strike attack by Soviets destined to bomb." Daily Utah Chronicle, October 29, 1981, p.4
  24. ^MAP Resource People - 2004, Minnesota Alliance of Peacemakers, Retrieved on 10 September 2008.

External links

[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=J._Edward_Anderson&oldid=1270782331"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp