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Work in the Heliophysics Science Division considers space phenomena relating to the sun, and includes robotic missions and satellites. [23] [24] The deputy director is Margaret Luce. [25] Fox was appointed the Associate Administrator for NASA's Science Mission Directorate on February 27, 2023, making her the organization's Head of Science. [26]
The Science Mission Directorate (SMD) of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) engages the United States' science community, sponsors scientific research, and develops and deploys satellites and probes in collaboration with NASA's partners around the world to answer fundamental questions requiring the view from and into space.
From October 2016 [2] until the end of 2022, he was the longest continually running Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA. [3] [4] Prior to this, he was Professor of Space Science and Aerospace Engineering at the University of Michigan, where he helped found the Center for Entrepreneurship. [5]
Official NASA bio; Colleen Hartman on C-SPAN on June 23, 2003 talking about the unmanned U.S. mission to Mars and science experiments to be conducted. Goodbye Galileo - What do you do with a dying space probe? That was the question facing Dr. Colleen Hartman '77 at NASA in the summer of 2003 - Pomona College Magazine, Spring 2004, Volume 40, No. 3
NASA's Solar Terrestrial Probes program (STP) is a series of missions focused on studying the Sun-Earth system. It is part of NASA's Heliophysics Science Division within the Science Mission Directorate. [1]
The NASA Kennedy News Releases will also have updates on LSP launches and mission accomplishments. Additional NASA pages which mention future launch dates are the LSP Education & Outreach, NASA Goddard's Explorers Program, NASA Goddard's Flight Projects Directorate and NASA Goddard's Upcoming Planetary Events and Missions. [33] [34]
Amer returned to NASA, where she developed instruments to measure fuselage drag in wind tunnels. [6] She was eventually appointed an executive in the Science Mission Directorate where she oversaw several missions, including Surface Water and Ocean Topography, CLARREO and GeoCarb (the Geostationary Carbon Cycle Observatory).
Lori Glaze is an American scientist and the director of NASA's Science Mission Directorate's Planetary Science Division. [2] [3] She was a member of the Inner Planets Panel during the most recent Planetary Science Decadal Survey, and has had a role on the Executive Committee of NASA's Venus Exploration Analysis Group (VEXAG) for several years, serving as the group's Chair from 2013–2017.