Louis Alan Hazeltine was born in
Morristown, New Jersey, in 1886 and attended the
Stevens Institute of Technology in
Hoboken, New Jersey, majoring in electrical engineering. He graduated in 1906 and accepted a job with
General Electric corporation. Hazeltine returned to Stevens to teach, eventually becoming chair of the electrical engineering department in 1917. The following year he became a consultant for the
United States Navy. The Navy job eventually parlayed into a position as an advisor to the U.S. government on radio broadcasting regulation, and later, a position on the National Defense Research Committee during
World War II. Hazeltine is best known for inventing the
Neutrodyne radio receiver circuit in 1922, which neutralized interelectrode capacitance in triode amplifiers to prevent unwanted feedback and oscillation. The design allowed stable multi-stage radio-frequency amplification without using regenerative feedback and was widely licensed to radio manufacturers during the early 1920s; see
Patents and licensing in early radio. Hazeltine was president of the
Institute of Radio Engineers in 1936. == References ==