Walter R. Evans, recipient of the 1987 American Society of Mechanical
Engineers Rufus Oldenburger Medal and the 1988 AACC Richard E. Bellman
Control Heritage Award, passed away at the age of 79 on July 10, 1999
in Whittier, CA. He is survived by his wife Arline and their four
children.
Walter Evans' principal contribution to the field of automatic control
was his invention of the Evans Root Locus Method in 1948 and his
subsequent invention of the Spirule, a tool used in conjunction with
the root-locus method. Because it codifies very useful frequency
information about a feedback system in such intuitive and appealing
graphical form, Evan's root-locus method has enjoyed widespread use
in the design of control systems and is now a standard chapter
in texts on feedback control systems.
Evans received his B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Washington
University in St. Louis, Missouri in 1941 and the M.S. degree
in Electrical Engineering from the University of California at
Los Angeles in 1951. During his lifetime, he worked as an engineer
at several companies, including General Electric, Autonetics (then
a division of North American Aviation, now known as Rockwell
International), and Ford Aeronautic Company; and he also served
as an instructor at Washington University for a few years.