Ernst Julius Berg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ernst Julius Berg in 1921

Ernst Julius Berg (9 Feb. 1871 - 1941) was a Swedish-born, American electrical engineer.

Biography[edit]

Ernst Julius Berg was born in Östersund, Jämtland County in Sweden. After graduating from the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm in 1892, he immigrated to the United States. He began working as an assistant to Charles Proteus Steinmetz at General Electric. He then joined the faculty of electrical engineering at Union College.

In 1909, he became head of electrical engineering department at the University of Illinois. Berg remained as department head until June 1913, when he resigned and returned to his former positions with General Electric Company and with Union College. He was associated with Union College until his death in 1941. A pioneer of radio, he produced the first two-way radio voice program in the United States. In the field of theoretical analysis of electrical circuits, he popularized Oliver Heaviside's technique of operational calculus.

In 1906 he married Gwendoline O'Brien. He is buried in Vale Cemetery in Schenectady, New York.

Works[edit]

Archive[edit]

References[edit]

  • S. Hensel (1994) Ernst Julius Berg Educator and Proselytizer of Heaviside's Calculus, IEEE Potentials, 13, 57.
  • R.R. Kline (1988) The General Electric professorship at Union College, 1903-41, IEEE Transactions on Education 31, 141.
  • Benson, Adolph B. & Naboth Hedin (1969) Swedes In America, New York: Haskel House Publishers

External links[edit]