Leo Beranek

Passing of Leo Beranek

I just learned of the passing of Leo Beranek. This was a real shock. Leo has been a fixture in the fields of acoustics and noise control for my entire career. When I was a co-op student and was told by my boss I would be the office noise expert, one of the books tossed on my desk to study was by Leo Beranek. Later, the textbook for the first course I took in noise control was edited by Leo Beranek.

Years later, I was at an Institute of Noise Control Engineering of the USA (INCE-USA) planning meeting and, during lunch, I sat down by chance at the table directly across from Leo Beranek. To be honest, I was not sure he was still alive having seen the copyright dates on some of his early publications. Before long, he had the whole table enthralled with his stories about his adventures and his enthusiasm for acoustics. To learn more about Leo, see hisrecent autobiography and the obituary that follows.

Without equivocation, Leo was a founder of the field of noise control. He was a leader in forming INCE-USA and initiated the thoughts for the publications and conferences we have today. I am not going to claim to be a great friend of Leo’s. I knew him well enough to say hello and talk occasionally about noise control and INCE-USA. I do not have sports or entertainment heroes. There are historical figures that I admire, but until yesterday, I had only one living hero. That was Leo Beranek. His contributions to the field of noise control are numerous, including societies, books, papers, concert halls, and most of all, recognition. He made noise control a real engineering discipline. I know I could never do what he had done, but I always had someone to try to emulate.

With all his accomplishments, considerable wealth, presidential awards, etc., you might think Leo would be a little aloof and hard to approach. In fact, the opposite was true. He was always enthusiastic about acoustics and would talk about the issues and what needed to be done with anyone who would listen. I think he sometimes got frustrated with the lack of progress on some topics, but he was very approachable and he motivated others with his enthusiasm.

To say he will be missed is an understatement. His passing is a great loss to the noise control community in the United States and around the world. He was truly a pioneer with outstanding courage, vision, and enthusiasm. He will be remembered fondly for all he contributed and accomplished. Personally, I will never forget his enthusiasm and passion for acoustics that continued beyond his first century of life and to his last days with us. I will always remember seeing him at a conference when he was 101, running to catch a speaker with a smile on his face. We all should enjoy our life’s work so much.

Jim Thompson
NNI Managing Editor
nnieditor@inceusa.org

Leo Beranek Obituary

Leo Beranek, a Massachusetts renaissance man—scientist, teacher, entrepreneur, television executive, philanthropist, author—died in Westwood, Massachusetts, on October 10, 2016, at age 102 after a long and extraordinarily productive life. He leaves his wife Gabriella; sons James K. Beranek of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Thomas B. Haynes of Chicago, Illinois; and granddaughter, Antonia Hsu Haynes. He was predeceased by Phyllis Knight Beranek, his wife of 42 years.

A 1936 graduate of Cornell College (Iowa) with a BA degree in physics and mathematics, Beranek went on to graduate school in the Applied Physics Department of Harvard University where he received his DSc degree in 1940 in the field of acoustics.

Beranek stayed at Harvard during World War II as director of two laboratories, the first being the Electro-Acoustic Laboratory, which dealt with voice communication in combat vehicles, and then the Systems Research Laboratory, whose mission was to improve the US Navy’s ability to combat Japanese Kamikaze aircraft attacks. At the war’s end, President Harry S. Truman issued Beranek a Certificate of Merit for his contributions to the war effort.

After World War II, Beranek became associate professor of communication engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he taught courses in electrical engineering and acoustics. His seminal textbook, Acoustics, was published in 1956, forever changing the teaching of acoustics to engineers.

In 1948, the acoustical consulting firm Bolt, Beranek and Newman (BBN) was formed with Beranek as president. Its first projects were the acoustics and sound systems in the United Nations buildings in New York, followed by NASA’s jet engine test facility in Cleveland. NASA’s first test of a new supersonic jet engine created such a loud noise for miles around that the city of Cleveland shut it down. Successfully solving the problem, Beranek designed and saw built the world’s largest acoustic muffler, which was featured in LIFE magazine (6/11/51).

In the fall of 1958, BBN began work for the Port of New York Authority (PNYA), which operated the Idlewild Airport (now JFK) serving New York City. Pan American Airlines had requested permission to fly the Boeing 707 (the first passenger jet airplane) from JFK, but the PNYA said that the plane must not produce more noise in the neighborhoods around the airport than that produced by existing propeller aircraft. Beranek and his team determined that the Boeing 707 was so noisy that its engines had to be equipped with heavy mufflers and follow a prescribed takeoff procedure in order to meet the PNYA’s dictum.

In 1965, under Beranek’s leadership, BBN became the vanguard of the digital age by putting together one of the best computer software groups in the East. In 1968, the Advanced Research Project Agency (ARPA) awarded BBN a contract to build a network to hook together 19 large-scale computers of different makes and different program languages, and in different locations. To do this, BBN invented the ARPANET, which consisted of 19 “Interface Message Processors” (IMPs), each of which was associated with one of the 19 mainframe computers. In the network, signals traveled from one IMP to another, and each IMP acted as the interpreter of messages that went to and from its associated mainframe computer. The first message between two IMPs and their associated computers was sent in September 1969. In 1971, BBN invented email with “@” as we know it today. The ARPANET grew, and when it reached about 500 users, it was split in two and rejoined by the TCP/IP protocol. This occurred on January 1, 1983, and that is the official birthdate of the INTERNET. Other networks soon joined and today people around the world enjoy the fruits of this invention.

Beranek left BBN in 1969 to become president of Boston Broadcasters Inc., which, after a long court battle, took over operation of Channel 5-TV in 1972 using the call letters WCVB. The programming at WCVB was so improved that the New York Times in 1981 carried a full-page article headed “Some Say This Is America’s Best TV Station.” The station was later sold to Metromedia.

After his foray into broadcasting, Beranek returned to acoustics. Among others, he consulted on five concert halls and an opera house in Japan. Among them was the Tokyo Opera City Concert Hall, which was hailed as an “acoustical miracle” on the front page of the New York Times (4/18/2000). The Hall, which opened in September 1997, is now considered one of the five best concert halls acoustically in the world.

PUBLICATIONS: Beranek published 185 technical papers and 13 books, the last 4 of which are: Concert Halls and Opera Houses (Springer 2004); Noise and Vibration Control Engineering (with coauthor; Wiley 2006), Riding the Waves (autobiography; MIT Press 2010), and Acoustics: Sound Fields and Transduxers (with coauthor; Elsevier 2014).

PUBLIC SERVICE: Beranek served the Boston Symphony Orchestra as a member and chairman of the Board of Overseers and later as member and chairman of the Board of Trustees (1968–1988). He was full-time president of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences for five years. The alumni of Harvard University voted him a member of their senior governing body, the Board of Overseers, for six years. He also served as president of the Acoustical Society of America and the Audio Engineering Society.

Both the Museum of Fine Arts Boston and the Boston Symphony Orchestra list Beranek and his wife as major financial benefactors.

HONORS: Member, National Academy of Engineering; Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences; Fellow, American Physical Society; Honorary Member, American Institute of Architects; Fellow, Institute of IEEE.

AWARDS: 2003 National Medal of Science (Presented by President George W. Bush); IEEE Founders Medal; Gold Medals from the Acoustical Society of America, Audio Engineering Society, and American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Commission on Acoustics; and the Abe Lincoln TV Award (Top USA Award for TV Management) from the Radio and TV Commission.

HONORARY DOCTORATES: Worcester Polytechnic Institute; Northeastern University; Suffolk University; Cornell College (Iowa); Emerson College.