Aviation Week Honors APL Researchers and NEAR Mission
4/15/02
Staff members from The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory,
Laurel, MD, will be honored April 16 by Aviation Week & Space
Technology magazine for their contributions to the NEAR mission to
an asteroid and the resulting advancement of space science. The awards
will be given during a ceremony at the National Air & Space Museum
in Washington, D.C.
Thomas B. Coughlin, Robert W. Farquhar and the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous
(NEAR) mission team will be inducted as 2001 Laureates in the space
category. APL's Stamatios "Tom" M. Krimigis will be feted
as an "honoree" for his contributions to NASA's New Horizons
mission to Pluto.
Thomas B. Coughlin
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Coughlin is programs manager for APL's Space Department. With specialties
of mission management and mechanical engineering, he has worked
with space missions at APL for 30 years. He oversaw NEAR mission
development and led the team as NEAR project manager, a role that
is being recognized by the Aviation Week award. Earlier work included
serving as program manager for the design, development and fabrication
of several fast-track defense department spacecraft missions.
Robert W. Farquhar
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Farquhar, a specialist in mission design and orbital mechanics, has been instrumental
in APL space programs for 12 years. He served as mission director
for NEAR, and is currently mission director for CONTOUR, a mission
that will launch in July to study at least two comets. He also serves
as mission manager for the MESSENGER mission to Mercury, which is
scheduled to launch in 2004 and enter orbit around the planet in 2009.
Previously, Farquhar worked for NASA for 25 years, where he developed
innovative maneuvers such as "halo orbits" as a member of
the ISEE-3, SOHO and Wind teams and lunar gravity-assist trajectories
for several other missions.
The NEAR mission team is being recognized for accomplishing the spectacular
feat of landing the first spacecraft on an asteroid when it touched
down on asteroid Eros on Feb. 12, 2001.
Krimigis, a physicist and head of APL's Space Department, has been a space
scientist for more than 40 years and has designed and built instruments
that have flown to seven of the nine planets. His participation
in the MESSENGER mission to Mercury and the New Horizons mission
to Pluto will complete the set. He is a specialist in solar, interplanetary
and magnetospheric physics; served as a principal investigator for
the Voyager and Cassini probes and was a co-investigator for the
Galileo, Ulysses, and ACE missions.
The 2001 Laureates will be presented with trophies and chronicled in
the April 29 issue of Aviation Week & Space Technology.
Go to 2002 News Articles Archive