Sidney H. Liebson (b. 1920) received his Ph.D. from the University of Maryland in 1947. His thesis was on the discharge mechanism of Geiger Mueller counters. He also participated in atomic bomb testing in the Pacific, developing radiation detectors that were used to measure bomb characteristics. In a significant test, his detectors validated the feasibility of making the hydrogen bomb. At a time when electronics had not been able to make measurements with nanosecond accuracy, he developed several techniques to accomplish this accuracy for measuring organic fluorescence decay times and organic scintillation pulse widths by indirect means. Earlier he received a US Navy award for developing the first equipment used to identify enemy radar. His invention of the halogen counter occured while he was working on his thesis.