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The National Academy of Engineering awards annually the Charles Stark Draper Prize , which is given for the advancement of engineering and the education of the public about engineering. It is one of three prizes that constitute the "Nobel Prizes of Engineering" - the others being the Academy's Russ and Gordon Prizes . The winner of each of these prizes receives $500,000. The Draper prize is named for Charles Stark Draper , the "father of inertial navigation ", an MIT professor and founder of the Draper Laboratory .
Past winners of the Charles Stark Draper Prize
1989 : Jack S. Kilby and Robert N. Noyce for their independent development of the monolithic integrated circuit .[1]
1991 : Sir Frank Whittle and Hans von Ohain for their independent development of the turbojet engine .[1]
1993 : John Backus for his development of FORTRAN , the first widely used, general purpose, high-level computer language.[1]
1995 : John R. Pierce and Harold A. Rosen for their development of communication satellite technology.[1]
1997 : Vladimir Haensel for his invention of "platforming ".[1]
1999 : Charles K. Kao , Robert D. Maurer , and John B. MacChesney for the development of fiber optics .[1]
2001 : Vinton G. Cerf , Robert E. Kahn , Leonard Kleinrock , and Lawrence G. Roberts for the development of the Internet .[1]
2002 : Robert Langer for the bioengineering of revolutionary medical drug delivery systems.[1]
2003 : Ivan A. Getting and Bradford W. Parkinson for their work developing the Global Positioning System .[1]
2004 : Alan C. Kay , Butler W. Lampson , Robert W. Taylor , and Charles P. Thacker for their work on Alto , the first practical networked computer.[1]
2005 : Minoru S. "Sam" Araki , Francis J. Madden , Edward A. Miller , James W. Plummer and Don H. Schoessler for the design, development, and operation of Corona , the first space-based Earth observation system.[1]
2006 : Willard S. Boyle and George E. Smith for the invention of the Charge-Coupled Device (CCD), a light-sensitive component at the heart of digital cameras and other widely used imaging technologies .[1]
2007 : Tim Berners-Lee for developing the World Wide Web.[1]
2008 : Rudolf E. Kalman for developing the Kalman filter .[1]
References