- Dr Asad M Madni FREng receives Academy’s most prestigious individual award
Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal, Royal Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering, presented the Academy’s most prestigious individual award, the Prince Philip Medal, to space technology pioneer Dr Asad Madni FREng in London on 8 November. The award recognises Dr Madni’s decades’ long career developing and commercialising intelligent sensors and systems across the aerospace, manufacturing and transportation industries.
The Prince Philip Medal is presented in honour of the late Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh KG KT, who was Senior Fellow of the Academy. The award is made biennially to an engineer of any nationality who has made an exceptional contribution to engineering.
Dr Madni served as President, COO and CTO of BEI Technologies Inc between 1992 to 2006, during which time the organisation became the world's largest independent supplier of yaw sensors for cars. He pioneered some of BEI’s most noteworthy technical successes including the Quartz MEMS GyroChip® - an industry-first - which is used worldwide for guidance, navigation and control in more than 90 types of aircraft and more than 80 models of passenger cars for automotive stability and rollover protection. Over 55 million GyroChip® have been produced and used to augment stability in passenger cars, helping to save millions of lives across the globe. The ongoing success of GyroChip® is testament to Dr Madni’s visionary leadership in commercialising defence technologies for the thriving automotive and aviation markets.
He also led the development of the control system for Hubble Space Telescope's star selector. While the new James Webb telescope has now made huge advances, Hubble’s control system paved the way with unprecedented pointing accuracy and stability, resulting in truly remarkable images that have enhanced our understanding of the universe.
Dr Madni has been a committed philanthropist, mentor to young professionals and a champion of diversity and inclusion for underrepresented groups. In the US, he spearheaded and financed a highly successful programme that helped retrain hundreds of displaced aerospace and defence engineers to obtain new positions in industrial and commercial industries.
The global impact of Dr Madni’s pioneering technical contributions has been recognised worldwide with more than 100 major international honours, six honorary doctorate degrees and six honorary professorships. Dr Madni has delivered lectures in more than 40 countries.
Professor Bashir Al-Hashimi CBE FREng, Chair of the Academy’s Awards Committee, said:
“Dr Asad Madni’s impact on the global engineering profession has been profound and felt across many industries. Electronic stability control and roll-over protection are of paramount importance to human safety which, thanks to the vision and technical capabilities of Dr Madni, we all enjoy when driving a car or flying on a plane. His achievements have saved countless lives, influenced the way we travel, and given us incredible insight into space. Dr Madni has demonstrated a commitment to serving future generations of engineers and championing diversity. He is a well-deserving winner of the Prince Philip Medal, the Royal Academy of Engineering’s most prestigious award.”
Dr Asad M Madni FREng, winner of the 2022 Prince Philip Medal, said:
“I am extremely grateful to have had my and my team’s innovations and contributions play an important role in saving millions of lives around the world; in helping us extend the limits of space exploration and enhancing our understanding of the universe; and in enhancing defence and security systems around the world. Receiving the Prince Philip Medal, the Royal Academy of Engineering’s most prestigious individual honour, with a roster of past recipients that includes giants whose contributions have shaped human progress, is truly a most gratifying and humbling experience”.
Notes for editors
- The Prince Philip Medal was awarded by the Royal Academy of Engineering in London on Tuesday 8 November 2022.
- Prince Philip Medal: In 1989, HRH The Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Senior Fellow of The Royal Academy of Engineering, agreed to the commissioning of a gold medal to be 'awarded periodically to an engineer of any nationality who has made an exceptional contribution to engineering as a whole through practice, management or education', to be known as the Prince Philip Medal. Inaugurated in 1991, the Prince Philip Medal was first presented to the wartime pioneer and inventor of the jet engine Air Commodore Sir Frank Whittle OM KBE CB FREng FRS.
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