Titu-Marius Băjenescu

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Born(1933-04-02)April 2, 1933
Spouseeng. Andrea Bogdan
Titu-Marius Băjenescu
Prof. DHC Titu-Marius Băjenescu
oct. 2017
Born(1933-04-02)April 2, 1933
EducationPolitehnica University of Bucharest
OccupationElectronic engineering
Spouseeng. Andrea Bogdan
ChildrenChristine-Susanne Durand
Parents

Titu-Marius Băjenescu (born April 2, 1933, in Câmpina, Prahova, Romania) is a Romanian engineer in electronics[1] naturalized Swiss, Doctor Honoris Causa of the Military Technical Academy of Bucharest and of the Technical University of Moldova. He specialized in the reliability of complex electronic systems and micro- and nanoelectronic components. He was awarded the "Tudor Tănăsescu" prize by the Romanian Academy.

The father, Ioan T. Băjenescu (September 17, 1899, Redea, Romanați, Romania – November 17, 1987, Craiova, Dolj, county, Romania), was transmission information Colonel of the Romanian Royal Army, Commander of the Cluj-Napoca Transmission Regiment. It first emitted amateur radio signals using the call sign CV5BI, then YR5BI. In March 1926, with Dr. Alexandru Savopol, he laid the foundations for the first radio club in Romania, in Craiova.[2] Together they built Romania's first short-wave Radio station and (in 1926) the first short-wave radio broadcast in Romania. Together with Dr. Alexandru Savopol, October 26, 1926, Second Lieutenant Ioan T. Băjenescu produced the first radio program in Romania for the general public; the program was heard throughout the territory of Oltenia and many echoes appeared in the press in all the cities of Oltenia, and even of the Timok Valley (Bulgaria).

The mother, Lelia Constanța (born May 21, 1908, Corlate, Romania; deceased December 15, 1980, Craiova, Romania), born Petrescu, was the first radio amateur woman in Romania, using her husband's call-sign YL CV5BI. Fluent in French and German, she established tens of thousands of radio links on all meridians. Unfortunately, of these QSL (which have been collected over the years as evidence of these radio links) there remains almost nothing, since, immediately after the establishment of the communist regime, they were all burned, as they were evidence of "links with enemies" outside the country.

His wife, Andrea, born Bogdan (born July 3, 1937), granddaughter of the academic professor Dr. Petru Bogdan, from the University of Iași, founder of higher education in physical chemistry in Romania, is an electronics engineer. She built the first phonetics laboratory at the University of Bucharest. After emigrating to Switzerland, she worked for four years as an engineer at Brown Boveri in the automation department.

Professor DHC Titu-Marius Băjenescu and his wife Andrea at the Technical University of the Republic of Moldova (Chișinău), during the award ceremony of the honorary title, in 2010

Studies

In 1951 he graduated from the college "Nicolae Bălcescu" in Craiova. At the same time as he went to secondary school, he attended the "Cornetti" Conservatory of Craiova, for violin, composition, counterpoint and orchestral conducting, with very good teachers, among others, Traian Elian, Constantin Becarian and Ion Alexandrescu. He joined the Polytechnic Institute of Bucharest, and attended the courses of the newly created Faculty of Electronics and Telecommunications, the Radiocommunication Section;[3] he was also part of the first class of electronic engineers (1951–1956). Shortly before graduation, he designed and realized the acoustics project for the new concert hall of the Craiova "Oltenia" Philharmonic Orchestra;[4] after the inauguration of the hall, local and central newspapers wrote that the acoustics of the concert hall were one of the most successful in South-Eastern Europe. Although he wanted to become a sound engineer at the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company, the political barriers specific to this period did not allow him to realize his dream.

Professional activity

Thanks to very good results at the diploma examination, he was appointed researcher at the Research Institute for Signals of the Romanian Army (1956–1960) then he won a competition and became researcher – later principal researcher – at the Institute of Energy of the Romanian Academy (1960–1968) where, under the direction of the eminent scientist Vasile-Mihai Popov, correspondent member of the Romanian Academy, he built the largest analogue machines in Romania: MECAN I and MECAN II. Later, by competition, he became Head of the Department of Cybernetics at the Institute for International Economic Studies of the Ministry of Foreign Trade (now the Institute of World Economy) (1968–1969); the following job was Head of the Electronics Laboratory of the Institute for Labour Protection Research (1969).

In 1968, following the presentation of a paper at a specialized congress in the Federal Republic of Germany, he received job offers on the spot from renowned western companies (Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron, Brown Boveri, Tele Denmark, etc.). The Government of Romania chose the offer of the Swiss company Brown Boveri because Romania had just bought the licence for the manufacture of diesel electric locomotives.

Then there was a period when he held various positions in large western companies:

Member in societies and associations

Awards and decorations

He was declared “The man of the year 2008” by the American Biographical Institute.[5]

For all his activity during a lifetime, the Military Technical Academy of Romania awarded him the title of Doctor Honoris Causa during a moving ceremony, where were also mentioned the feats of arms and the particular merits of his father, the Colonel of transmissions Ioan T. Băjenescu (May 14, 2008).[6][7] On this occasion, he presented the communication entitled[8] "FIDES – a new method for assessing the reliability of electronic components which take account of new technologies". FIDES was initiated by the French DGA (Délégation générale pour l'Armement) and carried out by a European consortium of eight defence and aeronautics manufacturers.

For his work in the field of reliability and telematics, as well as for the donation[9][10][11][12] of his personal library containing thousands of books, technical and scientific journals in five languages, in 2010, the Technical University of the Republic of Moldova (Chişinău) awarded him the title of Doctor Honoris Causa.[9][13] During this solemnity, Titu-Marius Băjenescu made a presentation on "Problems and progress in the reliability of electronic micro- and nanosystems".

Published works

Notes

References

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