While spending much of his retirement in Italy at Lavinio Rome, he remained connected with Imperial College as a Senior Research Fellow and also became Staff Scientist of CBS Laboratories, in Stamford, Connecticut; there, he collaborated with his lifelong friend, CBS Labs' president Dr. Peter C. Goldmark in many new schemes of communication and display.
His Ph.D. supervisor was Dennis Gabor, a Nobel Prize-winning physicist, and his thesis was published as Electron Interaction Effects (1952).
Dennis Hopper | Dennis Quaid | Dennis the Menace | Dennis Rodman | Zsa Zsa Gabor | Dennis Miller | Dennis Potter | Dennis Haysbert | Dennis the Menace (1959 TV series) | Dennis Kucinich | Dennis Morgan | Dennis Lillee | Dennis Dart | Dennis Prager | Dennis Oppenheim | Dennis Waterman | Dennis Green | Dennis Franchione | Dennis | Sandy Dennis | Hugh Dennis | Dennis Morgan (songwriter) | Dennis Lehane | Dennis Adams | Dennis Wilson | Dennis Wheatley | Dennis Tito | Dennis O'Keefe | Dennis Cooper | Dennis Christopher |
The idea of replacing the complicated Schmidt corrector plate with an easy to manufacture full aperture spherical meniscus lens (a meniscus corrector shell) to create a wide field telescope occurred to at least 4 optical designers in early 1940s war-torn Europe, including Albert Bouwers (1940), Dmitri Dmitrievich Maksutov (1941), K. Penning, and Dennis Gabor (1941).