Herman Paul Schwan
1915 -2005
Herman Paul
Schwan ,
renowned scientist and engineer, loving and devoted
husband and father, died quietly in his home in Radnor, Pennsylvania on
March 17, 2005.
Herman P. Schwan was born in Aachen, Germany in 1915. He obtained the
German superior school certificate with distinction in Goettingen,
1934. He studied mathematics, physics, and engineering in Goettingen and
then biophysics in Frankfurt. He obtained his Ph.D. in biophysics at the
University of Frankfurt in 1940 with distinction, his teaching certificate
at the University and his professional doctorate (Dr. habil) in the fields
of physics and biophysics in 1946.
Schwan worked in 1936-37 and again in 1938 with Telefunken on high
frequency and microwave measuring techniques. He became a research
associate with the Max Planck Institute of Biophysics in Frankfurt in 1937,
an assistant professor with the University of Frankfurt and associate
director of the Max Planck Institute in 1946. In 1947 he came to the
United States, working at the Aeromedical Equipment Laboratory of the U.S.
Naval Base in Philadelphia. He joined the University of Pennsylvania in
1950. In 1952 he was appointed Head of the Electromedical Division of the
Moore School and in 1961 Chairman of the Graduate School of Arts and
Sciences Group on Biomedical Electronic Engineering. In 1972 he became
Chairman of the Bioengineering Department. He retired as the Alfred Fitler
Moore Professor Emeritus in 1983.
Over the course of his long career, Schwan published more than 300
scientific papers and gave countless lectures. He received numerous awards
in recognition of his contributions, including the Edison Medal of the IEEE
and the first d'Arsonval Award of the Bioelectromagnetics Society.
membership in the National Academy of Engineering, and several honorary
degrees. An extended biography of Schwan can be found at
http://repository.upenn.edu/be_papers/52/
As a scientist, Schwan is best known for many biophysical studies related
to electrical properties of cells and tissues, and on nonthermal mechanisms
of interaction of fields with biological systems. He discovered or provided
important theoretical insights into phenomena such as the large
low-frequency dielectric dispersion that is found in biological material,
and electrically induced forces on cells.
Schwan was also deeply involved in the issue of possible health effects of
nonionizing electromagnetic fields. His letter to the U.S. Navy in 1953,
proposing a safe limit for human exposure to microwave energy of 100 W/m2
(based on thermal analysis) became the basis for exposure standards in the
U.S. and elsewhere. Among many other committee activities in this field, he
chaired the committee that established the first (1965) U.S. exposure limit
for RF energy, for the American National Standards Institute. This standard
evolved into the present IEEE C95.1 standard and was widely influential in
the development of exposure limits around the world.
Schwan was married in 1949 to Anne Marie Del Borrello of Philadelphia. In
addition to his wife, Herman is survived by five children and six
grandchildren. He was a mentor to all of them, first and foremost teaching
them always to think for themselves and never to just follow the crowd. A
man of integrity, Schwan influenced the lives of many, including his wife
and children, and his many students and colleagues.
Kenneth R. Foster
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