4/24/2015 Susan Mumm, Media Specialist
Written by Susan Mumm, Media Specialist
His contributions were recognized when he was called to return to the Urbana campus April 18 to receive the College of Engineering Alumni Award for Distinguished Service. An AE alumnus, Bragg was cited “for his role as a visionary educator in the field of aerospace engineering and a proven leader in the College of Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.”
Bragg currently serves as the Frank & Julie Jungers Dean of Engineering for the University of Washington in the hub of the aerospace community. Much of his prior academic career as both a student and a faculty member was spent at Illinois. He earned his BS (1976) and MS (1977) degrees in AE, before earning his PhD (1981) from The Ohio State University, where he served as an assistant and, later, an associate professor. Bragg returned to Illinois in 1990 as an associate professor and was named a full professor in 1995.
In 1999, Bragg was named Head of the AE Department. While an administrator and faculty member of the department, Bragg had more than $15 million in externally funded research and published more than 200 research papers. More than 50 graduate students and five post-doctoral researchers received advanced degrees under Bragg’s guidance. Bragg earned the Stanley H. Pierce Teaching Award from the College in 2004, the same year he was named a fellow in the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA).
Passionate about hypersonics, aerodynamics, wind turbines, flight mechanics and sonic boom mitigation, his research has advanced those areas of study. Bragg is best known as an international expert and consultant on the affect of ice accretion on aircraft aerodynamics and flight safety. He was a designer of the vortex generators for the Voyager aircraft, which performed the first unrefueled flight around the world. Bragg earned NASA’s Turning Goals Into Reality (TGIR) award to “revolutionize aviation” in both 2001 (AGATE Icing Research Team) and 2002 (Aircraft Alliance Project Team).
A native of nearby Atwood, Bragg had a passion for airplanes growing up, earning his pilot’s license at age 17, and enrolling at Illinois in 1972 despite some unsettling times in the aero industry.