| His methods have been accepted world-wide by government and industrial laboratories 
				  Branko Leskovar 1930-2016, distinguished Croatian-American scientist
                | Branko Leskovar
 July 2, 1930 - January 19, 2016
 
 Born in Zagreb in 1930, Croatia, Branko Leskovar died on January 19th 2016. He was 85 years old. He started his early professional career as a brilliant student at the University of Zagreb, Croatia where he earned his Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering. In 1965 he was offered a temporary appointment at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, where he remained until retirement.
 
 As Section Leader and a Principal Investigator at LBL, his group supported advanced research programs in physics, biology and medicine, orienting the research programs toward solving recognized problems in scientific instrumentation and the long term needs of the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory departments and other Dept. of Energy Laboratories.
 
 Over the course of his long professional career, he directed programs that resulted in more than 100 publications widely cited in the scientific literature. His work in resolution studies of electro-optical devices has had profound benefits on development and manufacturing of new devices with significantly improved characteristics. He greatly improved the accuracy and range of measuring methods in device resolution studies. These methods have been accepted world-wide by government and industrial laboratories. Upon retirement, he served as Scientific Advisor to numerous universities and US government agencies. He was a fellow of IEEE and Sigma Xi societies.
 
 His outstanding scientific achievements earned him full recognition in his native country where he became a member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
 
 A man of his word, with an equal measure of brilliant intellect and integrity, he cherished his family and enduring friendships that sustained him in difficult times during post war time and again after his first wife, Ema, passed away. He is survived by his devoted wife, Ana; his son, Dr. Tomislav Leskovar, MD; and extended family in the US and Croatia.
 
 Interment will be held at Holy Cross Catholic Cemetery in Colma, CA on January 26th, 2016. Contributions in Branko's name may be made to the Croatian Scholarship Fund, croatianscholarship.org.
 
 Published in San Francisco Chronicle on Jan. 25, 2016
 
 Source www.legacy.com
 
 
 |  A huge collection of 162 scientific works by Dr Branko Leskovar, kept at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing of the University of Zagreb. A selection of his works is available via ResearchGate . Many thanks to Mrs. Jadranka Lisek for kind help. A few titles of his works can be seen below. A summary of one of the works by Dr Branko Leskovar.
 Some of the papers by Dr. Branko Leskovar (and his coauthor C.C. Lo) cited in the monograph Advances in Electronics and Electron Physics, edited by Peter Hawks, Vol 60, Academic Press, 1983
 
                | An extensive biography of Dr Branko Leskovar has been poblished by Croatian-American Society in Zagreb in the monograph Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 1 (1997),
 ISBN 953-97325-0-6:
 
 
 Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 1 (1997)Milan Randić (Beograd, 1930) – Iowa State University, Ames – mathematical chemistry Egon Matijević (Otočac, 1922) Clarkson University, Potsdam, N.Y. − chemistry Petar Alaupović (Prague, 1923), Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation, Oklahoma City − medical biochemistry Branko Leskovar (Zagreb, 1930), University of California, Berkeley − electrical engineering Vladimir Katović (Bihać, 1935) Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio) − chemistry William Feller (Zagreb, BH, 1906 – Princeton, 1970), Princeton – probabilistic mathematics Luka Milas (Zmijavci, 1938), M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston − biomedicine
 Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 2 (2004)Ivo Derado (Split, 1929), Max-Planck Institute, München – physics Zlatka Grubišić-Gallot (Glamoč, BH, 1940), CNRS, Strasbourg − chemistry Mirko Dikšić (Cvetković, 1942), McGill University, Montreal, chemistry and radiochemistry Andrija Kornhauser (Zagreb, 1930), Food and Drug Administration, Washington – chemistry, medical biochemistry Vladimir Hlady (Zagreb, 1949), University of Utah, Salt Lake City − biotechnology Nebojša Avdalović (Stolac, BH, 1935), Dionex Corp. California – biomedicine Suad Efendić (Trebinje, BH, 1937), Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm – biomedicine Mladen Vranić (Zagreb, 1930), University of Toronto – biomedicine
  (ISBN: 953-97325-7-3) Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 3 (2006)Hedvig Hricak (Zagreb, 1946), Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York – biomedicine Stevo Julius (Kovin, Serbia, 1929), University of Michigan Ann Arbor – biomedicine Krešimir Krnjević (Zagreb, 1927), McGill University, Montreal – biomedicine Predrag Cvitanović (Zagreb, 1946), Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta − physics Mirjana Randić (Ogulin, 1934), University of Iowa, Ames – veterinary medicine Stanimir Vuk-Pavlović (Zagreb, 1949), Mayo Clinic, Rochester, N.Y. – biomedicine Branko Ladanyi (Zagreb, 1922), University of Montreal – civil engineering Nikola Tesla (Smiljan, 1956 – New York, 1943), New York – electrical engineering, physics Lavoslav Ružička (Vukovar, 1987 – Zurich, 1978), ETH, Zurich – chemistry Vladimir Prelog (Sarajevo, 1906 – Zurich, 1998), ETH, Zurich – chemistry
  (ISBN: 953-97325-8-1) Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 4 (2008)Vlasta Bonačić-Koutecký (Split, 1943), Humboldt University, Berlin – chemistry Željko Bošnjak (Virovitica, 1949), University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee – biomedicine Miroslav Gačić (Split, 1947), Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale, Trieste (Italy) − oceanography Steven Živko Pavletić (Zagreb, 1956), National Cancer Institute (NCI)  and the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, Maryland –  biomedicine Zdenko (Zed) Rengel (Osijek, 1957), University of Western Australia, Perth − biology, agriculture Joseph Schlessinger (Topusko, 1945), Yale University – biomedicine Marko Turina (Zagreb, 1937), University Hospital, Zurich – biomedicine Krešimir Veselić (Zagreb, 1940), Fern University in Hagen (Germany) – mathematics
  (ISBN: 978-953-97325-9-0) Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 5 (2010)Guy Paić (Paris, 1937), National Autonomic University of Mexico, Mexico City – physics (associated with CERN) Daniel Denegri (Split, 1940), CERN – physics Laszlo Forro (Staro Petrovo Selo, Serbia, 1955), Federal Polytechnical School, Laussane (Switzerland) – physics Frances Šeparović (Blato, Korčula, 1954), University of Melbourne – chemistry, biophysics Boris Martinac (Zagreb, 1949), Victor Chang Cardiatic Research Institute, Sydney – biophysics Ivan Gutman (Subotica, 1947), Sveučilište u Kragujevcu − mathematics and chemistry Goran Ungar, (Zagreb, 1948), University of Sheffield (U.K.) – chemistry Nenad Ban (Zagreb, 1966), Swiss Federal Institute (ETH), Zurich – biology and biophysics Dean Nižetić (Split, 1959), Barts and the London Queen Mary′s School of Medicine, London – biomedicine Paško Rakić (Ruma, 1933), Yale University – biomedicine Branko Souček (Bjelovar, 1930), IRIS Group, Bari (Italy) – electronics, computers Nenad Bićanić (Zagreb, 1945), University of Glasgow – civil engineering
  (ISBN: 978-953-7743-02-4) Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 6 (2012)Mladen Bestvina (Osijek, 1959), University of Utah, Salt Lake City − mathematics Sunčica Čanić (Pula, 1961), University of Houston, Houston – mathematics Dinko Počanić (Sarajevo, 1955), University of Virginia, Charlottesville –physics Željko Ivezić (Sarajevo, 1965), University of Washington, Seattle – astronomy Veljko Radeka (Zagreb, 1930), Brookhaven National Laboratory, Stony Brook (N.Y.) – electrical engineering, physics Dušica Maysinger (Zagreb, 1947), Mc Gill University, Montreal – pharmacy, biochemistry Ivan Đikić (Zagreb, 1966), Wolfang Göthe University, Frankfurt – biomedicine Josip Matovinović (Ličko Cerje, 1914 – Ann Arbor, 1998), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor – Biomedicine
  (ISBN: 978-953-7743-03-1) Distinguished Croatian Scientists in the World 7 (2014)Jakša Cvitanić (Split, 1962), California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena – mathematics Mladen Viktor Wickerhauser (Zagreb, 1959), Washington University, St. Louis – mathematics Davor Pavuna, Koprivnica, 1952), Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne (Switzerland) – physics Karl Dragutin Rakos (Štefanje- Bjelovar, Croatia, 1925 – Vienna, 2011), Vienna Universität) − astronomy Marin Soljačić (Zagreb, 1974), MIT, Boston – physics Branko Ruščić (Rijeka, 1952), Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago – chemistry Dubravko Justić (Krk, 1958), Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge – marine ecology Eugen Koren (Belgrade, 1940), Genentech, Abbot.. (California) – biomedicine, biotechnology Igor Mezić (Rijeka, 1967), University of California, Santa Barbara – engineering, mathematics Nikola Tesla (Smiljan, 1956 – New York, 1943), New York – electrical engineering, physics
  (ISBN: 978-953-97325-04-8) Source Croatian-American Society 
 |  Professor Vladimir Naglić hosted by Dr. Branko Leskovar in his house in California, 1885.Photo by the courtesy of professor Vladimir Naglić.
 
 Professor Vladimir Naglić  and Dr. Branko Leskovar at the Grgich Hills  winary in California, USA, 1995. Photo by the courtesy of professor Vladimir Naglić.               | Dr. Branko Leskovar, svjetski poznati elektrotehničar i dopisni član Hrvatske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti (HAZU) umro je 19. siječnja u Kaliforniji u 86. godini, priopćeno je u četvrtak navečer iz HAZU-a.
 
 Glavna područja istraživanja dr. Leskovara bili su detektori zračenja za akceleratore visokih energija, sigurnost nuklearnih reaktora i razvoj spektroskopskih metoda,  Branko Leskovar rodio se u Zagrebu 1930., gdje je 1954. diplomirao, a 1963. doktorirao na zagrebačkom Elektrotehničkom fakultetu.
 
 Od 1954. do 1963. radio je u Institutu Ruđer Bošković, gdje je sa skupinom istraživača, postavio temelje razvoja i primjene suvremene elektronike i elektroničke instrumentacije u Hrvatskoj.  Od 1963. do 1965. dr. Leskovar bio je izvanredni docent na Elektrotehničkom fakultetu u Zagrebu, a od 1965. do kraja aktivne karijere, 1994. godine, bio je istraživač na Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory Kalifornijskog sveučilišta u Berkeleyu.
 
 Dopisni član HAZU u Razredu za matematičke, fizičke i kemijske znanosti bio je od 1988. godine, naveo je Marijan Lipovac iz Ureda za odnose s javnošću i medije HAZU-a.
 
 Izvor HINA
 
 
 |  Fourth  grade students of the Faculty of Electrical Engineering of the  University of Zagreb, 1953. Photo taken in front of the present Mimara  Gallery in Zagreb.Branko Leskovar on the left, wearing dark glasses. Many thanks to professor Vladimir Naglić for this photo.
 
 Branko Leskovar and Vladimir Naglić. In the same group, we can find professor Branko Souček , distinguished Croatian expert in  digital computer technology, as a student of the University of Zagreb in 1953. Professor Souček constructed the first Croatian digital computer already in 1958. Photos by the courtesy of professor Vladimir Naglić.               | Doktorska disertacija Branka Leskovara
 
 Doktorska disertacija Branka Leskovara imala je naslov Koherentna detekcija električkih signala [PDF], 94 str. , a obranjena je dne 2. ožujka 1963. pred komisijom koju su činili sljedeći profesori:
 
 
 Danilo Blanuša (predsjednik komisije)Vinko AlbertZlatko SmrkićVladimir MatkovićVladimir Muljević
 U vrijeme obrane disertacije, B. Leskovar već ima jedan prihvaćen rad u časopisu Journal of Electronics and Control, 14 (1963), pod naslovom "The mean value of envelope of a sine coherent wave superimposed on the narrow-band Gaussian noise". U uvodnom dijelu se posebno zahvaljuje Dr. ing. M. Konradu za pomoć prilikom izrade radnje.
 
 U kratkoj autobiografiji na kraju svoje doktorske disertacije, Branko Leskovar navodi da je rođen 2. srpnja 1930. godine u Zagrebu. Osnovnu školu i gimnaziju polazio je u Zagrebu, gdje je 1949. godine maturirao. Iste godine upisao se na Elelektrothenički odsjek Tehničkog fakulteta u Zagrebu (koji je godine 1956. postao ETF). Diplomirao je na Odjelu slabe struje 6. svibnja 1954. godine. Od 15. svibnja 1954. radio je na odjelu elektronike Insituta "Ruđer Bošković" (s prekidom od jedne godine 1954/55. zbog odsluženja vojnog roka).
 
 Popis radova dr. Branka Leskovara dostupan je putem mrežnih stranica Središnje knjižnice FER-a.
 
 
 |  Formated for CROWN by Darko ŽubrinićDistributed by www.Croatia.org                                . This message is intended for  Croatian                          Associations/Institutions     and   their  Friends  in     Croatia   and   in    the              World. The      opinions/articles          expressed on   this   list  do     not            reflect  personal        opinions of the         moderator. If   the       reader   of   this          message is not  the       intended     recipient,         please     delete    or     destroy   all  copies       of this      communication    and          please,   let us      know!
 
 |