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Anwar Chitayat

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Anwar Chitayat
Born (1927-08-21) 21 August 1927 (age 97)
Alma materNew York University Tandon School of Engineering
Spouse(s)Deanna, Constance, Ann
Children5 (Mara, Aimee, Duri, Adrienne and Olivia)
Parents
  • Khadoory Chitayat (father)
  • Khatoon Aboody (mother)

Anwar Chitayat (born August 21, 1927) is an Iraqi manufacturer who is the founder and former CEO/Chairman of Anorad Corp, a company which was acquired in 1998 by Rockwell Automation.[1][2][3] His engineering work was recognized by SEMI in 2000.[4] In 1997, Chitayat was awarded "Entrepreneur of the Year" by Ernst and Young, and in 2009 he was inducted to Long Island Hall of Fame for his contributions to science and technology.[citation needed]

Chitayat's work is focused on linear motor technology[5] and high performance positioning systems [s6]. Ford Motor Company held 10% shares at Anorad to promote their "Factory of the Future" with high velocity machine (HVM) tools, which was followed up by Chrysler.

FORTUNE Cover Page Photo, November 25, 1996

Education

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Anorad Corporation

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Anwar founded the Anorad Corporation in 1972 in his basement in Plainview, New York. Anorad is an acronym that stands for "Anwar's Own Research And Development".

Notable patents and discoveries

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One of the Anorad machines

High speed with high precision manufacturing

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Anwar's discoveries in linear motor technology[6] and its high performance positioning systems applications attracted global interest from hundreds of industrial technology manufacturers, including Fortune 500 companies.

Nanotechnology and laser interferometers

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Anwar held more than thirty patents in the field of measurement and manufacturing of very small components and geometries, including those as small as a nanometer. The small size required the development of new technologies using interferometry for measurement, nanopositioning motors, and stages. The interferometer manufactured and measured semiconductors by using the wavelength of light as a measuring stick. Length and angles were measured with small fractions of laser light waves.[s1][s2][s3][s10]

Anwar was working on nanotechnology since the 1960s, when this kind of small devices had no practical value. Later on, they were needed for the manufacture of microprocessors and semiconductors, and now they serve as a basis of computers, phones and other electronic products.[s6]

Fiber optics

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Anwar was awarded 4 patents for use of fiber optics for imaging, including techniques for image enhancement. One of these systems was used in the Apollo program to monitor the rocket engines. The optical lenses were placed in the environment of the rocket, and the fiber optics transmitted the images remotely to the human monitors and camera. [7] [8] [9] [10]

Satellite and star trackers

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Anwar's first invention was a light modulating scanner,[11] which enabled Kollsman Instruments to manufacture a star tracking system to be used in moonlit conditions, twilight, and daylight. This daylight star tracker was used to navigate airplanes and ships to determine their precise location, by using the latitude and longitude of the stars. This system is now obsolete due to the introduction of GPS.

Family life

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Personal

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Anwar was born August 21, 1927, in Baghdad, Iraq, and raised with six brothers and sisters in a low-income household. At the age of 16, he obtained the highest score in Iraq in its final exam, which was given to all high schools each year. He was awarded a scholarship to come to the U.S. to study Mechanical Engineering. He obtained two simultaneous B.Sc. degrees in Electrical and Mechanical Engineering from the University of Denver in 1951. He also obtained an M.Sc. in Electrical Engineering from the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn in 1952, now New York University Tandon School of Engineering. In 1952, Anwar joined the U.S. Army for two years and was stationed in Alaska where he serviced the U.S. DEW Line. Anwar became a U.S. citizen shortly after leaving the US Army.

Anwar was married three times. He has two daughters with his first wife Deanna: Mara and Aimee. Deanna Chitayat holds a PhD in Experimental Psychology and served as a Dean of Hofstra University.

Sources

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1.Chitayat, Anwar (January 1964). "The Utilization of Krypton & LASER Interferometers for Photographic Mansuration". Photo-Optical Data Reduction. 2: 9. Bibcode:1964SPIE....2....9C.
2.Chitayat, Anwar (September 1964). "The Utilization Of Krypton And Laser Interferometers For Photographic Mansuration". Proceedings of the SPIE. Photo-Optical Data Reduction. 2: 89–99. Bibcode:1964SPIE....2...89C. doi:10.1117/12.970698. S2CID 121697092.
3.Sweet, AR.; Chitayat, A. (June 1, 1967). "RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF A PROTOTYPE LASER POINT MARKING INSTRUMENT". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
4.Chitayat, Anwar (May 18, 1998). "Linear Motors Come Into Their Own" Design News
5.Chitayat, Anwar ( Volume 11,1987) " Linear Motors Provide Fast and Precise Motion" official proceedings of the international motor conference
6.Chitayat, Anwar (July 3–5, 1994). "Nanometer X-Y positioning states for scanning and stepping" Proceedings Of The International Symposium On Manufacturing
7.Chitayat, Anwar (March 6–12, 2009) "Long Island technology hall of fame" Long Island Business News
8.Paul Schreiber (September 14, 1967) "Watching Over We The People" Newsday
9.Brown, Stewart F (November 25, 1996) "The Fast New World Of Flat Motors" Fortune
10.Chitayat, Anwar (June 1967). "Review of recent applications of laser interferometers in automatic checkout correction and control". IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics. 3 (6): 263. Bibcode:1967IJQE....3..263C. doi:10.1109/JQE.1967.1074509.

References

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  1. ^ Chandler, Doug (October 1, 2003). "Rockwell acquisition adds linear motors". Business Management.
  2. ^ "Rockwell Automation buys Anorad, sees linear motor expansion". Control Engineering. October 1, 1998.
  3. ^ "Rockwell Automation Completes Acquisition of Anorad Corporation". The Auto Channel. November 6, 1998.
  4. ^ "SEMI AWARD NORTH AMERICA RECIPIENTS". SEMI. Innovator and Developer of the Brushless Linear Motor
  5. ^ BROWN, STUART (November 25, 1996). "The Fast New World of FLATMOTORS" (PDF). Fortune (Cover Page).
  6. ^ "Flat linear motor". Google Patents. March 3, 1998.
  7. ^ "Fiber optical image enhancement device utilizing polarized synchronous motors". Google Patents. November 11, 1965.
  8. ^ "Fiber optics image enhancement means with image rotation". Google Patents.
  9. ^ "Means for transmitting plural images through a fiber optic cable". Google Patents. February 14, 1967.
  10. ^ "Fiber optics image enhancement using electromechanical effects". Google Patents. January 12, 1971.
  11. ^ "Light modulation system". Google Patents. March 13, 1962.