The Wright Brothers Medal was conceived of in 1924 by the Dayton Section of the Society of Automotive Engineers, and the SAE established it in 1927 to recognize individuals who have made notable contributions in the engineering, design, development, or operation of air and space vehicles. The award is based on contributed research papers.[1][2][3]

Wright Brothers Medal
Awarded forContributions to aerospace engineering
Country United States
Presented bySAE
First awarded1927
Websitehttps://www.sae.org/participate/awards/wright-brothers-medal

The award honors Wilbur and Orville Wright as the first successful builders of heavier-than-air craft, and includes an image of the Wright Flyer, the plane which they flew in 1903 at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.

Awardees and research topics: 1928-1975 edit

Awardees edit

Source: SAE International

  • 1976 no award given
  • 1977 - Raymond M. Hicks and Garret N. Vanderplaats[50]
  • 1978 no award given
  • 1979 Gary E. Erickson, Dale J. Lorincz, William A. Moore, and Andrew M. Skow: Effects on Forebody, Wing and Wing-Body-LEX Flowfields in High Angle of Attack Aerodynamics
  • 1980 Walter S. Cremens: Thermal Expansion Molding Process for Aircraft Composite Structures
  • 1981 Raymond M. Hicks: Transonic Wing Design Using Potential Flow Codes -- Successes and Failures
  • 1982 Andre Fort and J. J. Speyer: Human Factors Approach in Certification Flight Test
  • 1983 Carol A. Simpson: Integrated Voice Controls and Speech Displays for Rotorcraft Mission Management
  • 1984 Robert J. Englar and James H. Nichols Jr.
  • 1985 Charles W. Boppe
  • 1986 James A. Hare: Increasing the Node Shifting Capability of Fixed Velocity Upper Stage Payloads using Slightly Elliptic Drift Orbits
  • 1987 Charles P. Blankenship and Robert J. Hayduk
  • 1988 Benton C. Clark III
  • 1989 Charles W. Boppe and Warren H. Davis
  • 1990 Mariann F. Brown and Susan Schentrup
  • 1991 Lourdes M. Birckelbaw and Lloyd D. Corliss: Handling Qualities Results of an Initial Geared Flap Tilt Wing Piloted Simulation
  • 1992 G. J. Bastiaans, Steve D. Braymen, S. G. Burns, Shelley J. Coldiron, R. S. Deinhammer, William J. Deninger, R. P. O'Toole, Marc D. Porter, and H. R. Shanks: Novel Approaches to the Construction of Miniaturized Analytical Instrumentation
  • 1993 no award given
  • 1994 Timothy Geels, Tom McDavid, Greg Robel, and Tze Siu: DGPS Precision Landing Simulation
  • 1995 Robert R. Wilkins Jr.: Designing the Conceptual Flight Deck for a Short Haul Civil Transport/Civil Tiltrotor
  • 1996 B. A. Moravec and Michael W. Patnoe
  • 1997 James R. Fuller: Evolution And Future Development Of Airplane Gust Loads
  • 1998 Robert S. McCann, Becky L. Hooey, Bonny Parke, Anthony D. Andre, David C. Foyle, and Barbara G. Kanki
  • 1999 Jeremy S. Agte, Robert Sandusky, and Jaroslaw Sobieski
  • 2000 no award given
  • 2001 Maurizio Apra, Marcello D'Amore, Maria Sabrina Sarto, Alberto Scarlatti, and Valeria Volpi: VAM-LIFE: Virtual Aircraft ElectroMagnetic Lightning Indirect Effect Evaluation
  • 2002 Gary L. Boyd, Alfred W. Fuller, and Jack Moy: Hybrid-Ceramic Circumferential Carbon Ring Seal
  • 2003 Timothy J. Bencic, Colin S. Bidwell, Michael Papadakis, Arief Rachman, and See-Cheuk Wong: An Experimental Investigation of SLD Impingement on Airfoils and Simulated Ice Shapes
  • 2004 Philip Freeman: A Robust Method of Countersink Inspection Using Machine Vision
  • 2005 John W. Fisher, Michael T. Flynn, Eric J. Litwiller, and Martin Reinhard: Lyophilization for Water Recovery III, System Design
  • 2006 James R. Akse, James E. Atwater, Roger Dahl, John W. Fisher, Frank C. Garmon, Neal M. Hadley, Richard R. Wheeler Jr, Thomas W. Williams: Development and Testing of a Microwave Powered Solid Waste Stabilization and Water Recovery System
  • 2007 Peter O. Andreychuk, Leonid S Bobe, Nikolay N. Protasov, Nikolay N. Samsonov, Yury Sinyak, and Vladimir M. Skuratov: Water Recovery on the International Space Station: The Perspectives of Space Stations' Water Supply Systems
  • 2008 Carl Jack Ercol: Return to Mercury: An Overview of the MESSENGER Spacecraft Thermal Control System Design and Up-to-Date Flight Performance
  • 2009 Atle Honne, John T James, Dirk Kampf, Kristin Kaspersen, Dr Thomas Limero, Dr Ariel V. Macatangay, Dr Herbert Mosebach, Paul D Mudgett, Henrik Schumann-Olsen, Wolfgang Supper, and Gijsbert Tan: Evaluation of ANITA Air Monitoring on the International Space Station
  • 2010 Henrik Kihlman, and Magnus Engström: Flexapods - Flexible Tooling at SAAB for Building the NEURON Aircraft
  • 2011 Matthew Barker, Luke Hickson, Joeseph K-W Lam, Stephen Paul Tomlinson, and Darran Venn: Mathematical Model of Water Contamination in Aircraft Fuel Tanks
  • 2012 Jerry Bieszczad, Michael Izenson, George Ford Kiwada, Patrick J Magari: Ultra- Compact Power System for Long-Endurance Small Unmanned Aerial Systems
  • 2013 Ing Rafael Fernandes de Oliveira
  • 2014 Troy Beechner, Kyle Ian Merical, Paul Yelvington
  • 2015 no award given
  • 2016 Tadas P. Bartkus, Peter Struk, Jen-Ching Tsao
  • 2017 Christian Boehlmann, Wolfgang Hintze, Philip Koch, Christian Moeller, Hans Christian Schmidt, Jörg Wollnack
  • 2019 Yuzhi Jin, Yuping Qian, Yangjun Zhang, Weilin Zhuge - Tsinghua University

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b United States. Navy Dept. Bureau of Aeronautics (1954). Significant American and international awards in aviation. Washington. pp. 91–92.
  2. ^ Wasserman, P. (1975). Awards, Honors, and Prizes. Vol. 1. Gale Company. p. 363. ISBN 9780810303768.
  3. ^ National Academy of Sciences (1934). Bulletin of the National Research Council. p. 116.
  4. ^ "Announcements". Aviation Engineering. 2: 63. 1929.
  5. ^ "Some Fundamental Economics of Aircraft Operation". Transactions of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. 52: 175. 1931.
  6. ^ United States Congress. Senate Committee on Naval Affairs (1936). Hearings. p. 257.
  7. ^ Daniel Guggenheim Medal Board of Award (1952). Pioneering in aeronautics: Recipients of the Daniel Guggenheim Medal, 1929-1952. p. 103.
  8. ^ Kholos, L. (2005). Courage and innovation: the story of LORD Corporation, 1924 to 2002. Albrecht & Associates. p. 51. ISBN 9780977175802.
  9. ^ "Dr. Warner, ICAO Council Pres., to Get Wright Trophy". National Aeronautics. 31–35: 65. 1952.
  10. ^ Daniel Guggenheim Medal Board of Award (1952). Pioneering in aeronautics: Recipients of the Daniel Guggenheim Medal, 1929-1952. p. 126.
  11. ^ "Jacobs' Paper Discussion Develops Additional Points Worth Studying". SAE Transactions. 29: 226. 1934.
  12. ^ "1937 Winner: Eastman Jacobs Gets Sylvanus Albert Reed Award". American Aviation. 1: 80. 1937.
  13. ^ "Announcements". Technology Review. 38: i. 1935.
  14. ^ "William Littlewood, Honorary Fellow". The Aeronautical Journal. 72: 66. 1968.
  15. ^ Manufacturers Aircraft Association (1937). The Aerospace year book. American Aviation Publications. p. 410.
  16. ^ "Scientific Notes and News". Science. 86 (2232): 324. 1937. Bibcode:1937Sci....86..324.. doi:10.1126/science.86.2232.324.
  17. ^ "Scientific Notes and News". Science. 87 (2260): 362. 1938. doi:10.1126/science.87.2260.362-a.
  18. ^ "Reid Presents Wright Brothers Medal to Browne". SAE Journal. 45: 14. 1940.
  19. ^ "Announcements". National Aeronautics. 19: 21. 1941.
  20. ^ "Announcements". Review of Scientific Instruments. 13: 244. 1942.
  21. ^ "Scientific Notes and News". Science. 95 (2464): 297. 1942. doi:10.1126/science.95.2464.297-a.
  22. ^ "Wright Award to Strang". SAE Journal. 17: 92. 1943.
  23. ^ Wood, Robert Hudson (1944). "Announcements". Aviation News. 1: 77.
  24. ^ "SAE Award Wright Brothers Medal to Campbell at Dinner". Aero Digest. 49: 205. 1945.
  25. ^ "Scientific Notes and News". Science. 101 (2625): 403. 1945. doi:10.1126/science.101.2625.402-b.
  26. ^ Mack, P.E. (1998). From engineering science to big science. NASA. p. 54. ISBN 9780160496400.
  27. ^ Wood, Robert Hudson (1947). "Medal to Judd". Aviation News. 7: 11.
  28. ^ "Judd Wins SAE Award". American Aviation. 10: 31. 1946.
  29. ^ "Gibbons Wins Wright Medal". The Bee Hive. 48: 31. 1948.
  30. ^ "Award Winner". American Aviation. 12: 33. 1949.
  31. ^ "Wright Brothers Medalists". Aeronautical Engineering Review. 9: 87. 1950.
  32. ^ "Technical News Digest". American Aviation. 13: 30. 1950.
  33. ^ Society, Royal Aeronautical (1951). "Wright Brothers Medal". Journal of the Royal Aeronautical Society. 55: 4.
  34. ^ "Announcements". Materials Engineering. 35: 206. 1952.
  35. ^ "W. J. Kunz of Bendix Wins SAE's Wright Brothers Medal". American Helicopter. 25–32: 4. 1951.
  36. ^ "Announcements". The Aeronautical Journal. 59: 287. 1955.
  37. ^ "'54 Wright Brothers Medal". American Helicopter. 33–40: 89. 1953.
  38. ^ "Inventor Award". The Aeroplane. 90: 206. 1956.
  39. ^ "Announcement". American Aviation. 19: 175. 1956.
  40. ^ "Award of Wright Brothers Medal". Automotive Industries. 121: 241. 1959.
  41. ^ "Announcements". Western Aerospace. 40: 28. 1960.
  42. ^ "Announcements". Aeroplane and Commercial Aviation News. 101: 447. 1961.
  43. ^ McDannald, A.H. (1963). Yearbook of the Encyclopedia Americana. Americana corporation. p. 548.
  44. ^ "Coauthors Glassco, Bockrath, Valluri Will Share Wright Brothers Award". SAE Journal. 72: 109. 1964.
  45. ^ Astronautics and Aeronautics, 1965 (NASA SP). NASA. 1966. p. 463.
  46. ^ NASA (1967). Aeronautics and astronautics, 1966: an American chronology of science and technology in the exploration of space. p. 296.
  47. ^ "Wolkovitch receives 1966 Wright Brothers Medal at LA Aeronautic Meeting". SAE Journal. 75: 92. 1967.
  48. ^ "Wright Brothers Medal". SAE Transactions. 79: 59. 1971.
  49. ^ "Wright Brothers Medal". SAE Transactions. 83: 20. 1975.
  50. ^ "Wright Brothers Medal". SAE Transactions. 90: 36. 1982.

External links edit