Robert (Bob) Eugene Munson is regarded as the father of practical microwave patch antennas. Although the patch antenna was first theorized by G. A. Deschamps in 1953, but it was not put to use for many years (by Munson), first on a datalink for Sidewinder missile, then on Sprintmissile's semi-active seeker.
So was it really Munson's genius or was he just in the right place at the right time??
The 1960s and 1970s witnessed
At this point of time. the height of the Cold War, Munson was a defense worker at Ball Aerospace. So Munson had just the right needs and facilities at his disposal for development of microstrip antennas, which the likes of Deschamps, Gutton and Baissinot were not able to take advantage of. These situational advantages apart it must have taken all of Munson's genius to make such outstanding progress in this field. Munson's name appears on many U.S patents, 29 at last count just on antennas. Today he's retired and living on a 160 acre vegetable farm outside Boulder. Financial benifits apart Munson's reputation in the field of microwave engineering exceeds all his contemporaries. The above information on Munson was obtained from the Microwave hall of fame, whereas a simple Google search on Deschamps hardly yielded any results.
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