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Patrick McKeown obituary

about 6 hours ago
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For the past four years, the James Webb space telescope has been returning stunning images of stars and galaxies that formed in the early universe.Parked in orbit a million miles from the Earth, the observatory is an extraordinarily sophisticated machine that shares a special engineering heritage with a swelling number of modern devices, from mobile phones to medical scanners and turbine blades.All are products of precision engineering, a discipline that blends the traditions of surveying, navigation, astronomy and time-keeping to create the technology that underpins our lives today.And one of its prime exponents was Patrick McKeown.McKeown, who has died aged 95, wrote the “11 principles of machine design” that were a distillation of everything he had learned about accuracy, stability and error correction in mechanical systems, and that have become the bedrock of precision engineering across the world.

In 1968, he used these principles to help launch a world-leading unit dedicated to the field at the Cranfield College of Aeronautics, which is now Cranfield University.The ultra-precision tools that were developed at the Cranfield Unit for Precision Engineering (CUPE) under his guidance are capable of measuring and shaping objects to atomic-level accuracy and are used for myriad different purposes today: to make MRI and CT scanners; to create huge display screens that are installed at Wembley, Twickenham and other stadiums; and to use their billionth of a metre accuracy to manufacture the tiny integrated circuits that run our phones and laptops.However, their contribution to the James Webb space telescope (JWST) is probably the most exciting example of the breakthroughs inspired by McKeown.Outside Earth’s atmosphere, space telescopes give unprecedented, clear views of the heavens but are hard to maintain.The Hubble space telescope, the JWST’s predecessor, required five separate $500m shuttle missions so astronauts could service it.

Precision engineering changed that by dispensing with the need for humans.After its launch in 2021, the JWST’s hexagonal-shaped mirror segments – designed with an accuracy of one thousandth of a human hair’s diameter – unfolded automatically to form a seamless single, huge mirror.Crucially, the lion’s share of the high-precision mirrors for one of the JWST’s main detectors, the Mid-Infrared Instrument, were manufactured at McKeown’s CUPE.As Paul Shore, former head of engineering at the National Physical Laboratory, said: “Look up to the stars, understand that a million miles from Earth the James Webb space telescope is looking out into the universe, and it’s doing so with mirrors made at Cranfield using a Pat McKeown ultra precision machine.”The renown of McKeown was remarkable, as testified by the engineer Dame Helen Atkinson, a deputy vice-chancellor at Cranfield.

“I visited an engineering lab in Singapore a few years ago and everyone there wanted to know about Pat, even though this was on the other side of the world and he had retired a decade earlier,” Atkinson said.“He was one of the greatest precision engineers in the world.”Born to Bob McKeown, an aeronautical inspector, and Gus (nee White) in Cricklewood, Middlesex (now part of Greater London), Pat experienced a childhood shaped by the vicissitudes of the second world war.Having moved to Coventry for Bob’s work, the family survived the blitz there in 1940 and was relocated to Prestwick, in Scotland.There he oversaw the receipt of American lend-lease aircraft and immersed his son in a world of engines and precision engineering, including a flight in the tail turret of a Liberator bomber over the Firth of Clyde.

“A truly memorable experience,” McKeown later recalled.Once back in England, Pat attended Bristol grammar school, where he excelled at rugby and athletics.While in Bristol, he met Mary Heath, whom he married in 1954.National service in the Royal Engineers was followed by a student apprenticeship at the Bristol Aircraft Company, where managers encouraged him to attend the College of Aeronautics at Cranfield, and he gained an MSc there in 1956.After working for more than a decade for the Swiss metrology company Société Genevoise d’Instruments de Physique (GSIP) – where he developed methods for defining and improving the three-dimensional accuracy of machine tools – McKeown returned to Cranfield to help set up its precision engineering unit, using funding from Harold Wilson’s “white heat of technology” programme.

The machines built by his team achieved unprecedented levels of accuracy that could be measured in billionths of a metre.At a time when the UK’s manufacturing was faltering, McKeown bucked the trend, however, walking into the offices of IBM, Kodak and 3M and emerging with lucrative contracts.Thanks to these, CUPE began to expand.Following retirement from Cranfield in 1995, he was the driving force behind the creation of the European Society for Precision Engineering and Nanotechnology (Euspen), which he founded and presided over in 1999, and which held its 26th international conference this year.He was elected a fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering in 1986.

Other honours included being apppointed OBE in 1991, the Faraday medal, the Georg-Schlesinger Preis, and lifetime achievement awards from engineering societies in the US, Japan and Europe.Pat was also a patron of Humanists UK and a committed humanist who believed people could live ethical, meaningful lives guided by reason and evidence rather than religion, and he campaigned vigorously for a secular state.He is survived by Mary, their three sons, Jonathan, Jeremy and Nick, nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.Patrick Arthur McKeown, engineer, born 16 August 1930; died 10 February 2026
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King’s state visit to US will take place in April despite calls to delay amid Iran war – UK politics live

The king’s state visit to the US is to go ahead next month as planned, Buckingham Palace has finally confirmed. The Press Association says:double quotation markCharles and the queen’s long-expected historic trip to see Donald Trump will take place in late April despite calls for it to be postponed because of the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.It will be the king’s first visit to the US as monarch and the first state visit by a British sovereign to America for nearly 20 years, since Queen Elizabeth II’s tour in 2007.Charles and Camilla will commemorate the 250th anniversary of American independence, attend a glittering state dinner at the White House, and the king will address Congress, the Palace confirmed.But exact dates and details have yet to be disclosed

1 day ago
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Karl Turner has Labour whip suspended after criticism of Starmer and No 10

The MP Karl Turner has lost the Labour whip after making a series of interventions criticising Keir Starmer and No 10, especially on changes to jury trials.A Labour source said Turner had been informed by the chief whip, Jonathan Reynolds, that he had had the whip suspended because of his conduct. Turner denied he had been informed by the whips and said he had learned about his suspension from journalists.The decision is understood to have been prompted in part by an interview given by Turner, the MP for Hull East, to Jody McIntyre, a campaigner who stood at the 2024 elections against Labour’s Jess Phillips.Turner wrote on X: “I am being told that I have had the whip suspended but I have not had any notification from the whips about this

1 day ago
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Opaque party funding affects all of British politics | Letters

While I agree with much of Polly Toynbee’s opinion piece (How will we know Labour is really cleaning up party funding? When Reform and the Tories fight like hell to stop it, 26 March), I was left a little concerned about the tone, which seemingly presented this as uniquely a Tory/Reform UK matter.Dirty money (or just opaque funding) in British politics is not really such a sectarian issue. The proposals would appear to do nothing to prevent a party from accepting, for example, £4m from a hedge fund in the run-up to an election, and not declaring it until afterwards (Labour/Quadrature). Nor would they prevent a party engaging a thinktank that had itself accepted £200m from a rightwing American tech oligarch, bringing them into government, and installing staff in the heart of the policymaking process (Labour/Tony Blair Institute/Larry Ellison of Oracle).But it was heartening to see Toynbee begin to address the way that disparities in funding distort the democratic process

1 day ago
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Nigel Farage to snub US conservative conference brought to UK by Liz Truss

Nigel Farage will snub a major conference of US conservatives that is being brought to the UK by Liz Truss.The short-lived former prime minister, who was accused of crashing the economy, was chosen by the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) to lead a version of the event in the UK in July.She announced this on stage in Texas on Monday while next to Matt Schlapp, commentator and chair of the event, which in the US has hosted major figures including Donald Trump, Ron DeSantis, Tulsi Gabbard and Hungary’s Viktor Orbán.However, mainstream conservative figures in the UK seem wary to be associated with the Truss-led event.“We will be steering well clear of it,” a Reform UK source said, dashing any hopes that Farage would attend

1 day ago
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Zack Polanski meets unions in attempt to get them to switch party funding to Greens

Zack Polanski has kicked off a charm offensive designed to convince trade unions to stop funding Labour and throw their weight behind the Green party, as he delivered the first in a series of speeches to union conferences.The Green leader has had “good conversations” with 10 trade unions, including some affiliated to Labour, according to party sources, and is due to address the University and College Union and the Bakers, Food and Allied Workers Union, not affiliated with Labour, in the coming months.The UK’s largest unions – Unite and Unison – were among those that denied negotiating with Polanski and said they remained affiliated to the Labour party. However, Unite is holding internal discussions about its future relationship with Labour before a special conference in 2027 at which it could potentially decide to disaffiliate.While Green party sources admitted that discussions Polanski had held with individual unions varied in formality, some union insiders were adamant that supporting the Greens would be a no-go area, and that such discussions were “much ado about nothing”

2 days ago
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Kemi the attention seeker somehow always makes two plus two equal five | John Crace

Losing sleep over the war in Iran? Worried sick about the cost of living? Can’t pay your energy bills? Then relax. Because Kemi Badenoch has a displacement activity for you.It’s becoming increasingly easy to understand the Conservative leader by viewing her as a hyperactive five-year-old at the back of the class who is constantly disruptive. Who can’t get through a lesson without some kind of attention-seeking behaviour. Who has a constant desire to be indulged even though her first reactions are invariably wrong

2 days ago
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Don’t blame AI for the Iran school bombing | Letters

about 5 hours ago
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Patrick McKeown obituary

about 6 hours ago
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Apple at 50 quiz: top sellers, turkeys and turtlenecks

about 7 hours ago
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MP rejects Palantir’s claims that criticism of NHS England deal is ‘ideologically motivated’

about 9 hours ago
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US tech firm Oracle cuts thousands of jobs as it steps up AI spending

about 11 hours ago
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I wore Meta’s smartglasses for a month – and it left me feeling like a creep

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