Professor Receives Prestigious Award for Pioneering Work in Aircraft Navigation
Illinois Institute of Technology Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Boris Pervan has received the 2022 from the Institute of Navigation. The prestigious award annually honors an individual for their āsustained and significant contributions to the development of satellite navigation.ā
Pervan was noted for āhis pioneering contributions to high-integrity GNSS-based aviation navigation and his dedication to education.ā
āItās huge,ā says Pervan, āand not just in the way youāre thinking. When they handed me the plaque, I almost fell into the podium.ā
He says it was a humbling experience to think about the people who have helped him along the way, including other Kepler Award winners such as Brad Parkinson, the father of GPS and Pervanās former Ph.D. adviser.
āIām really interested in the work, and to be credited for doing something that you really like, that means that somebody thinks itās actually pretty good. How could you not like that?ā he says.
Pervanās work has been transformative.
āThereās so much that depends on GPS these days,ā says Pervan. āMy whole career has been focused on having high-accuracy and high-integrity navigation simultaneously.ā
Systems that put GPS in the driverās seat, controlling a car or airplane, are only possible because of his work to ensure the reliability and precision of GPSāand there are high stakes, with people's lives on the line.
āIf Iām using my cell phone to find a pizza place, and I get there and the pizza place is not there, thatās an annoyance. If you take the same GPS device and couple it into your carās control system, thatās totally different. It could be taking you into a wall or off a bridge into the Āé¶¹APP River,ā says Pervan. āIf a pilot needs to land an airplane in zero visibility conditions, we can do that using satellites. Thereās an obvious need for accuracy and a very low acceptable risk for failure.ā
The specific problems that heās worked on have shifted over the years. Pervan says that he started by focusing on avoiding errors such as satellite faults, but now the greatest threats to GPS are nefarious actors, making his job a type of wargaming, working to build defenses into the system.
Pervan says heās always trying to focus on practical impact.
āThe potential [of this technology] is awesome. Itās not the type of work thatās going to sit on dusty shelves,ā he says.
āBehind everything that Iāve done are my graduate students and postdocs. They are the ones that put in the sweat and the late nights and all of that. I get a lot of credit for the work that they do,ā he adds.
In addition to research, Pervan was also honored for his dedication to education, which he says is something that has become increasingly important to him throughout his career.
āWith research, you can make progress for one day and then be stuck for the next two weeks. But if Iāve taught a lecture or helped a student, I can go home and know that Iāve made a difference in someoneās life,ā he says.
Pervan was the recipient of the Department of Mechanical, Materials, and Aerospace Engineeringās 2022 Excellence in Research Award.
Photo: Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Boris Pervan with the 2022 Johannes Kepler Award (provided)