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David R. Smith is a renowned American physicist and professor of electrical and computer engineering at Duke University in North Carolina. Smith's research focuses on electromagnetic metamaterials, or materials with a negative index of refraction. As a graduate student at the University of California San Diego Smith and his colleagues, working in the laboratory of Professor Sheldon Schultz, discovered the first material that exhibited a negative index of refraction.[1][2] Smith, along with four European researchers, for research in mematerials, was awarded the Descartes Prize in 2005, the European Union's top prize for collaborative research.[3] He is known also as the first person to create a functioning cloak of invisibility that renders an object invisible in microwave wavelengths.[4][5][6] Although the cloaking device had limited ability to conceal an object from light of a single microwave wavelength, the experiment was an initial demonstration of the potential of metamaterials, constructed composite materials with unusual optical properties, to behave in unique ways because of both their chemical and structural properties.[5]

Smith obtained a Ph.D. in physics from the University of California San Diego in 1994. In 2009 Reuters news service listed Smith as a potential Nobel laureate in physics.[1]

References


David R.Smith

David R. Smith (born circa 1970) is a financial analyst with the Procter and Gamble Company. Smith, a resident of Deerfield Township, Warren County, Ohio, is from "the West" (as he says on his website) and has a B.S. in mechanical engineering and a master's degree in engineering management, both from Northwestern University. He is an Eagle Scout and active in the Boy Scouts of America. He is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church)(Mormon).

Smith ran for Congress in Utah in 2002 but never appeared on the ballot because he fell from contention on the third ballot at the state convention, and he did run for Congress in Tennessee in 2004 [892].
Smith announced his third campaign, for Ohio, on April 9, 2005 R. Smith Announcement.doc, declaring he was "both a fiscally and morally conservative Republican with a platform aimed at improving our financial and economic condition." Smith campaigned on a conservative platform. On his website, he wrote:
:David has a very strong faith in God. He believes our country’s Founding Fathers were inspired in writing the Constitution and laying the foundation of our country. He believes families are the central unit of society and that our country’s strength is dependent on the strength of its individual families.
He was a candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress to replace Rob Portman in the Second District of Ohio in the special primary held June 14, 2005.

Regarding his most recent campaign, he announced his candidacy for the Ohio GOP primary on May 2, 2006, to challenge incumbent Mike DeWine and engineer William G. Pierce for the United States Senate. Former Air Force Lt. Col. John Mitchel, who received nearly 200,000 GOP votes in 2004 against Senator [George Voinovich] and dropped out of the GOP primary on March 13, 2006 said, “"Now is the time to get behind one of the remaining challengers, and in my opinion, the best qualified is Bill Pierce, however, I would caution everyone to learn more about both challengers before they cast their vote on May 2nd." [893]

Democrat Paul Hackett announced on February 14, 2006, that he would not remain in the Democratic primary. The Democratic nominee in the November 2006 general election may be Congressman Sherrod Brown, whose only announced opponent is Merrill Keiser, Jr., a truck driver. [894]

Somewhat condescendingly, Peter Bronson of The Cincinnati Enquirer wrote that Smith "is the best 'Dubya' look-alike in the (2005 congressional) race, and he quotes Patrick Henry better than Patrick Henry." [895]

Smith and his wife Jenelle have three sons: Joshua, Tate, and Porter.

External links

  • Campaign site








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