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Four Navy Researchers Receive the Vice Admiral Harold G. Bowen Award for Patented Inventions For Aircraft Safety System

For Immediate Release: Dec 15, 2005

Arlington, Va.—Chief of Naval Research Rear Adm. Jay M. Cohen will present the Vice Admiral Harold G. Bowen Award for Patented Inventions to four Navy researchers in a ceremony at the Office of Naval Research on Thursday, December 15, 2005. The patent was awarded to Thomas Anderson, Thomas Hanrahan, Charles W. Shaffer, and John (Jack) Schultz for their work on the embedded Terrain Awareness Warning System for Aircraft.

The four inventors work at the Naval Air Systems Command and were issued patent number 6,484,072 in 2002. The embedded Terrain Awareness Warning System (eTAWS) was designed to help avoid a phenomenon called “controlled flight into terrain,” which has been the leading cause of Navy aircraft mishaps over the past ten years, and also accounts for many civilian crashes. These accidents occur when an airworthy aircraft under the control of the flight crew is flown unintentionally into terrain, obstacles or water when the crew somehow loses situational awareness.

eTAWS assesses an aircraft’s status and alerts the pilot of an impending controlled flight into terrain, providing a visual and aural indication of what action should be taken to avoid potential loss of aircrew and craft. Within two years of the patent’s award, technology derived from the eTAWS research by this team was credited with saving two F/A-18 aircraft and their crews.

The technology is now installed in more than 200 aircraft, with plans for installation in several hundred more. This safety system could reduce the Navy’s current mishap rate of 0.36 per 100,000 F/A-18 flight hours, which translates to four aircraft. This equates to a cost avoidance of approximately $304 million in loss of aircraft alone, and would protect the Navy’s defense readiness.

This award is named in honor of Vice Admiral Harold G. Bowen who was the first Chief of Naval Research. He was responsible for the establishment of a "grass roots" patent system within the Navy and instrumental in the statutory creation of the Office of Naval Research, which succeeded the administratively established Office of Research and Inventions.

The purpose of this award is to recognize the patented inventions of present or past Navy employees, civilian and military, that are of greatest benefit to the Navy. The extent of adoption for Navy use, the cost savings, increased military capability, or increased quality of life of Navy personnel resulting from the patented invention are all taken into account in determining which patents qualify for the award.

About the Office of Naval Research

The Department of the Navy’s Office of Naval Research provides the science and technology necessary to maintain the Navy and Marine Corps’ technological advantage. Through its affiliates, ONR is a leader in science and technology with engagement in 50 states, 55 countries, 634 institutions of higher learning and nonprofit institutions, and more than 960 industry partners. ONR, through its commands, including headquarters, ONR Global and the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., employs more than 3,800 people, comprising uniformed, civilian and contract personnel.