George M. Low Award Explained
The George M. Low Award is an annual award given by NASA to its subcontractors in recognition of quality and performance. NASA characterizes it as a "premier award". NASA's chief of safety and mission assurance, Terrence Wilcutt, called it "our recognition for their management's leadership and employee commitment to the highest standards in performance."[1]
The award was named after George M. Low, a NASA leader and former administrator who spearheaded efforts to improve quality and mitigate risk after the disastrous Apollo 1 fire. He provided management and direction for the Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and advanced crewed missions programs.
Recipients
- 2012 - URS Federal Services; ATA Engineering, Inc.
- 2011 - Sierra Lobo, Inc.; Teledyne Brown Engineering
- 2010 - Analytical Mechanics Associates, Inc.; Neptec Design Group; Jacobs Technology, Inc.; ATK Aerospace Systems
- 2009 - United Space Alliance; Applied Geo Technologies
- 2008 - ARES Corporation; Oceaneering International
- 2007 - ASRC Aerospace Corporation; Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne; Sierra Lobo; Lockheed Martin
- 2006 - Teledyne Brown Engineering; Barrios Technologies
- 2005 - SGT Inc; ATK Thiokol; QSS Group, Inc.; BTAS, Inc
- 2004 - BTAS, Inc. (Business Technologies and Solutions), ERC, Inc; Northrop Grumman; SGS; Alliance Spacesystems, Inc.;[2] Titan Corporation
- 2003 - Marotta Controls; Lockheed Martin; Boeing
- 2002 - Analytical Services & Materials; Jacobs Sverdrup; ManTech; RS Information Systems; Williams International
- 2001 - Native American Services; Raytheon; Swales Aerospace
- 2000 - Advanced Technology; Boeing; Computer Sciences Corporation; Jackson and Tull
- 1999 - Barrios Technology; Kay and Associates; Raytheon; Thiokol Corporation
- 1997-1998 - Advanced Technology, AlliedSignal, BST Systems, DynCorp, ILC Dover
- 1996-1997 - Dynamic Engineering, Inc.; Hummer Associates; Boeing North American; Scientific and Commercial Systems Corporation; Hamilton Standard Space Systems International; Unisys Corporation
- 1995-1996 - Hamilton Standard Space Systems International
- 1994-1995 - Unisys Corporation
- 1992 - IBM; Honeywell
- 1991 - Thiokol Corporation; Grumman Corporation
- 1990 - Rockwell International Corporation; Marotta Scientific Controls
- 1989 - Lockheed Corporation
- 1988 - Rockwell International Corporation
- 1987 - IBM; Martin Marietta Corporation
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: George M. Low Award Page. https://web.archive.org/web/20070218205407/http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/codeq/gml/. dead. 18 February 2007. nasa.gov. NASA. 21 June 2013.
- Web site: Alliance Spacesystems, Inc. Honored with NASA's Prestigious George M. Low Award . 3 March 2005 .