UC-Davis professor honored with Machine
Design Award
Steven A. Velinsky, a professor at the
University of California, Davis, will be honored this month for his
research contributions in the mechanical design field and professional
leadership within ASME's Design Engineering Division and Systems and
Design Group.
Velinsky, an ASME Fellow, will receive the Society's Machine Design
Award at a ceremony during the ASME Design Engineering Technical Conferences,
which will be held in Las Vegas from Sept. 47. The award, established
in 1958, recognizes eminent achievement or distinguished service in
the field of machine design.
Velinsky is a professor of mechanical and aeronautical engineering and
co-director of the Advanced Highway Maintenance and Construction Technology
Research Center at the University of California, Davis. A professor
for more than 20 years, he has developed new and unique courses in the
mechanical design area, and has been the advisor to a large number of
master's, doctoral, and postdoctoral students.
Through his research, Velinsky has made significant contributions in
the areas of robotic systems design and analysis, and design of machine
elements and systems. He, together with his colleagues at UC-Davis,
has pioneered the application of robotics and automation to highway
maintenance and construction. This has included the design and development
of numerous robotic vehicles that have been used by the California Department
of Transportation on the state's highways. In addition, he has been
involved in the analysis and design of numerous machine elements, including
wire ropes and cables, air bearings, ball screws, and vehicle power
transmission systems and components such as differentials. He also has
applied mechanical design methods to biomedical engineering.
Velinsky has served on a number of ASME committees, particularly in
the Design Engineering Division, since 1985. He received his bachelor's
degree in mechanical engineering at the State University of New York
at Buffalo in 1977. He earned his master's degree in mechanical engineering
and his doctorate in theoretical and applied mechanics at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1979 and 1981, respectively. A registered
professional engineer in California, he has been an ASME member since
1983.
back to news & features