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  2. Draper Laboratory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draper_Laboratory

    Draper Laboratory is an American non-profit research and development organization, headquartered in Cambridge, Massachusetts; its official name is The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory, Inc. [6] The laboratory specializes in the design, development, and deployment of advanced technology solutions to problems in national security, space ...

  3. Charles Stark Draper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Stark_Draper

    Charles Stark "Doc" Draper (October 2, 1901 – July 25, 1987) was an American scientist and engineer, known as the "father of inertial navigation". [2] He was the founder and director of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Instrumentation Laboratory, which was later spun out of MIT to become the non-profit Charles Stark Draper Laboratory.

  4. Charles Stark Draper Prize - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Stark_Draper_Prize

    The Draper Prize is awarded biennially and the winner of each of these prizes receives $500,000. [2] The Draper prize is named for Charles Stark Draper, the "father of inertial navigation", an MIT professor and founder of Draper Laboratory.

  5. Pentagon Spends $257.8 Million on Trident Nuke Upgrades - AOL

    www.aol.com/2013/03/07/pentagon-spends-2578...

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  6. Apollo Guidance Computer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer

    The AGC was designed at the MIT Instrumentation Laboratory under Charles Stark Draper, with hardware design led by Eldon C. Hall. [2] Early architectural work came from J. H. Laning Jr., Albert Hopkins, Richard Battin, Ramon Alonso, [7] [8] and Hugh Blair-Smith. [9]

  7. Albert G. Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_G._Hill

    Albert Gordon Hill (1910-1996) was a physicist. He was a key leader in the development of radar in World War II, director of the MIT Lincoln Laboratory development of the electronic Distant Early Warning and SAGE continental air defense systems, and first chairman of The Charles Stark Draper Laboratory.

  8. David Hoag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Hoag

    David Garratt Hoag (October 11, 1925 – January 19, 2015) was an American aeronautical engineer who was Director of the Apollo Program at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Instrumentation Laboratory, later renamed the Charles Stark Draper Laboratory.

  9. PIGA accelerometer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PIGA_accelerometer

    A recovered MMIA accelerometer from an unexploded V2 was presented to Dr Charles Stark Draper of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's instrumentation lab who had been developing the basis of inertial navigation for aircraft by initially concentrating efforts on achieving extremely low drift rate gyroscopes known as a floated integrating ...