M. A. Sargent Medal
Appearance
The M. A. Sargent Medal is awarded by Engineers Australia for longstanding eminence in science or the practice of electrical engineering. It is named in honour of Michael Anthony (Mike) Sargent, an outstanding Australian electrical engineer.[1] The medal is the highest award of the Electrical College board of Engineers Australia.[2]
Recipients
[edit]Source: Engineers Australia
- 1989 Stuart G. Lister, State Electricity Commission of Queensland
- 1990 Graham Goodwin,[3] University of Newcastle, Australia
- 1991 John Ness, MITEC Ltd
- 1992 W. Derek Humpage,[2] University of Western Australia
- 1993 W. John Edwards, Industrial Automation Services Pty Ltd
- 1994 Martin Green,[4] University of New South Wales
- 1995 Rodney Tucker,[5] University of Melbourne
- 1996 Else Shepherd, Powerlink Queensland
- 1997 John Hullett, Curtin University
- 1998 John Richard (Rick) Gumley, Erico Lightning Technologies
- 1999 Michael Miller,[6] University of South Australia
- 2000 Mark Sceats,[7] University of Sydney
- 2001 No award
- 2002 Brian D. O. Anderson,[8] Australian National University
- 2003 Henry d'Assumpcao,[9] Defence Science and Technology Organisation
- 2004 Richard Middleton,[10] University of Newcastle, Australia
- 2005 Noel Godfrey, Hatch Associates
- 2006 Barry Inglis, CSIRO
- 2007 Vic Gosbell,[11] University of Wollongong
- 2008 Keith Hilless,[12] Zerogen Pty Ltd
- 2009 No award
- 2010 David James Skellern,[13] Macquarie University
- 2011 Paul Wilson,[14] Queensland University of Technology
- 2012 Trevor S. Bird,[15] CSIRO
- 2013 John O'Sullivan,[16] CSIRO
- 2014 Don Sinnott,[17] Defence Science and Technology Organisation
- 2015 David Sweeting[18] University of Wollongong and Alex Zelinsky,[9] Defence Science and Technology Organisation
- 2016 Alan Finkel,[19] Office of the Chief Scientist (Australia)
- 2017 Hugh Durrant-Whyte,[20] The University of Sydney
- 2018 Xinghuo Yu,[21] RMIT University
- 2019 Derek Abbott,[22] University of Adelaide
- 2020 Ian Hiskens,[23] University of Michigan
- 2021 Ian Webster, Ampcontrol P/L and Qing-Long Han, Swinburne University[24]
- 2022 Tapan Saha, University of Queensland and Peng Shi, University of Adelaide[25]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "College Awards" (PDF). Engineers Australia.
- ^ a b "Faculty Prizes". University of Western Australia.
- ^ "Biography". Trove.
- ^ "Biography". Trove.
- ^ "IEEE LEOS News, p. 22" (PDF). IEEE.
- ^ "UniSA names inaugural Michael Miller Medal winner". University of South Australia.
- ^ "Executive management team". Calix.
- ^ "Biographical entry". Encyclopedia of Australian Science.
- ^ a b "Prestigious engineering award". IEEE. 2015-08-28.
- ^ "Annual Report" (PDF). Hamilton Institute.
- ^ "Gosbell's top honour for power quality achievements". University of Wollongong.
- ^ "December 2009 Newsletter". Engineers Australia.
- ^ "Order of Australia" (PDF). Australian Government.
- ^ "Annual Report" (PDF). Engineers Australia.
- ^ "Biography". CSIRO. 2015-01-13.
- ^ "2013 Newsletter". Engineers Australia.
- ^ "Jindalee over the horizon radar". IEEE. Archived from the original on February 3, 2019.
- ^ "Reflection of a M A Sargent Medal Winner 2015" (PDF). IEEE. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 12, 2019.
- ^ "Electrical College Board Awards Evening". Engineers Australia.
- ^ "And the winner is". Engineers Australia.
- ^ "Prof. Xinghuo Yu Awarded the M.A. Sargent Medal". IEEE Industrial Electronics Magazine. 12 (3): 47. 2018. doi:10.1109/MIE.2018.2856550.
- ^ "Staff News". University of Adelaide.
- ^ "Ian Hiskens receives MA Sargent Medal". University of Michigan.
- ^ "Port Stephens' Ian Webster Takes Out Engineerings Top Honour". NewsOfTheArea.
- ^ "Meet the winners of Australia's top engineering awards for 2021". Engineers Australia.