Saturday, April 27, 2019

Bruce Francis

Francis B A

The following tribute is in memory of Professor Bruce Francis who passed away on March 27, 2018:

Professor Emeritus
Bruce Francis was born in Toronto in 1947 and grew up in Hamilton and Grimsby. He obtained his B.A.Sc. and M.Eng. degrees in Mechanical Engineering at the University of Toronto in 1969 and 1970. In 1971, he joined the (then) Electrical Engineering Department at the University of Toronto as a Ph.D. student under the supervision of Professor Murray Wonham. He received his Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering in 1975. In 1976-78, he held postdoctoral positions at the University of California, Berkeley, Cambridge University, and McGill University. He was first an Assistant Professor at McGill in 1978-79, then at Yale University in 1979-81, and finally at the University of Waterloo in 1981-84. In 1984, he joined the ECE department at the University of Toronto as an Associate Professor, and was promoted to Full Professor in 1986. Of his return to Toronto, Bruce wrote “I had landed where I had always wanted to be, in the best control group in Canada, at the best university in Canada, with the best engineering program (Engineering Science), in my home country.”
Bruce’s scientific career was remarkably rich and varied. He is considered by many to be one of the most influential researchers in control theory. It is not possible in a few words to do justice to Bruce’s many scientific achievements. We will mention two fundamental ones.
In his Ph.D. research with Murray Wonham, Bruce investigated the problem of structural stability of linear multivariable regulators. The object of inquiry was a class of feedback controllers capable of regulating some variables in a control system irrespective of parameter variations and external disturbances. In this context, Bruce proved that such a controller must by necessity incorporate an internal model of the external disturbances acting on the system. This so-called “Internal Model Principle” is one of the most profound results of linear control theory, and one that continues to inspire much research in control theory and in fields as diverse as biology and neuroscience. In the early 1980s, Bruce began a vigorous collaboration with George Zames at McGill University, and others, on what became known as the H-infinity control problem. This problem, originally formulated by Zames, formalizes classical notions of robustness and performance in an elegant operator-theoretic framework. Throughout the 1980s, Bruce worked on the H-infinity control problem with great vigour. Of this exciting period of his scientific life, Bruce wrote: “George and I had four H-infinity papers at the CDCs in 1981, 1982, and 1983. These were the high points of my career, because the topic of H-infinity became really hot. At one of my CDC presentations, there were people standing in the doorway because there were not enough chairs in the hall.”
Bruce’s research on the H-infinity control problem culminated in 1989 with a celebrated paper in the IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control that provided the definitive solution to the problem. The paper in question was co-authored with J.C. Doyle, K. Glover, and P.P. Khargonekar, and is one of the highest cited papers in the history of the Transactions on Automatic Control, winning the Outstanding Paper Award and the IEEE W.R.G. Baker Prize Award.
In 1990, Bruce published a monograph titled “Feedback Control Theory,” with co-authors J.C. Doyle and A.R. Tannenbaum. In it, he revisited classical feedback control from a modern perspective, leveraging the viewpoint of H-infinity control and presenting some of the new results he had just developed in this area. This monograph made a major impact in his academic community, and it remains to this day a prime example of scientific writing of the highest quality. This book was followed, in 1994, by another influential monograph that Bruce co-authored with Tongwen Chen, titled “Optimal Sampled-Data Control Systems”.
As was mentioned earlier, Bruce’s contributions to control theory are extensive and far-reaching. Bruce’s research was driven by an intense curiosity and an uncompromising desire to understand each subject at the deepest, foundational level. He never took anything for granted, and courageously questioned the status quo. His writing was elegant and minimalist, his style economical and mathematically rigorous.
Besides being a remarkable scientist, Bruce was a successful teacher, winning four teaching awards at the University of Toronto, and inspiring generations of graduate students and colleagues with his elegant mathematical style and precise problem formulations. Bruce was also a beloved and charismatic research supervisor. Twelve of the students he supervised in various capacities are now professors at universities in Canada, the USA, China, and Japan. Bruce was a mentor to many of his younger colleagues, instilling principles of academic integrity and standards of scientific writing. Bruce is for many colleagues the model of a true academic.
In 2004, Bruce was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. Despite an inner turmoil of which perhaps only a few close friends were aware, Bruce endured his condition with fortitude, even humour. In 2012, he became Professor Emeritus and retired gracefully from his academic pursuits. Bruce is survived by his beloved wife Jingwen and daughter Lian.
Tribute prepared by Professor Manfredi Maggiore in consultation  with Professors Murray Wonham and Raymond Kwong
Biography
Bruce A. Francis received the B.A.Sc. degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1969, the M.Eng. degree in Mechanical Engineering in 1971, and the Ph.D. degree in Electrical Engineering in 1975, all from the University of Toronto. He received a two-year NSERC Postdoctoral Fellowship in 1975 and spent the first year in the EECS Department at the University of California, Berkeley, and the second year in the Control and Management Systems Division, University of Cambridge. He held teaching and research positions at McGill University, Yale University, and the University of Waterloo, before joining the ECE Department at the University of Toronto in 1984. In January, 2012, he became Professor Emeritus. Professor Francis’s subject is control theory.
Memberships/Awards
·         Recipient IEEE Control Systems Award, 2015
·         Recipient Hendrik Bode Lecture Prize, 2014
·         Fellow Canadian Academy of Engineers (since 2010)
·         Delivered the Peter Sagirow Seminar at the University of Stuttgart in 2010
·         Fellow Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (since 1988)
·         Co-recipient of two Outstanding Paper Awards for papers appearing in the IEEE Transactions on Automatic Control in 1984 and 1990
·         Co-recipient of the IEEE W.R.G. Baker Prize Award in 1991
·         Holder of a Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Fellowship in 1989
·         Winner of four teaching awards at U of T

Here is a link to his professional life.   

Pete Truman

Class, I am once again saddened to have to report the passing of another member of our Mechanical 6T9 class, Pete Truman. Thanks Marie for finding this for us.

Truman Peter Tregerthen 

Date of death:
Sunday September 18, 2016 

source 
The Peterborough Examiner, ON
2016-09-21



Truman, Peter Tregerthen - (Retired Engineer, General Electric Canada) 

Suddenly at Peterborough Regional Health Centre, on Sunday, September 18, 2016 in his 71st year. Beloved husband of Norma Mary Jean Shea. Loving father of Carrie Truman (Ben Keys) and Nicole Truman (Peter Gilbert) both of Peterborough. Devoted Grandfather "Grumpa" of Natalie and Rebecca Keys. Dear brother of Pamela Money (Paul) of Ida. Son-in-law of Gladys Shea of Lindsay and brother-in-law of John "Jack" Shea (Donna) of Fenelon Falls. Son of the late Marguerite Truman. Proud lifetime cottager on Kasshabog Lake, home to countless memories with family and friends. Sadly missed and lovingly remembered by many cousins, relatives and friends. The family will receive friends at Comstock-Kaye Life Celebration Centre, 356 Rubidge Street, on Sunday, the 25th of September from 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. and on Monday, the 26th of September from 12:00 - 1:00 p.m., followed by a Memorial Service in the Chapel at 1:00 p.m. In memory of Peter, donations may be made to the Lakefield Animal Welfare Society ("LAWS"), the Ontario Professional Engineers Foundation for Education or to a charity of your choice. Online condolences may be made at www.comstockkaye.com. The Peterborough Examiner, ON, 2016-09-21 --- Peter T. Truman March 19, 1946 - September 18, 2016... Groupe Dignité, CA, 2016-09-22