Thomas E. Thorpe Mars Surveyor Operations Project Manager Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
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Thomas (Tom) E. Thorpe is the Mars Surveyor Operations Project Manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He is responsible for the flight operations of all science Investigators and the facilities necessary to conduct instrument operation, data acquisition, telemetry processing and science data analysis and archiving to achieve the science objectives for the Mars Surveyor series of missions. He was formerly the Science Systems Manager for the Mars Global Surveyor payload development and Science Office Manager of the Mars Observer Project. Thorpe joined JPL in 1969 as an Experiment Representative for the Mariner 9 camera experiment and has worked on a variety of spacecraft missions including the 1976 Viking (Orbiter Camera representative and Guest Investigator), Galileo (deputy science manager) and Uylsses (science manager and deputy project scientist) Missions. |
Born in Duluth, Minnesota on January 19, 1945, Thorpe grew up in North Hollywood, California and earned his Bachelor of Arts in 1966 and Masters of Arts (1967) in Astronomy from the University of California at Los Angeles. Following college he worked at Eastman Kodak on Lunar Orbiter imaging and has taught astronomy at Glendale Community College in the extended day program since 1970.
He has published over 30 papers in the science literature concerning Mars science on topics such as the Mars photometric function, opposition effects, global dust storm expansions.
Thorpe is married with two children in college and lives in Sylmar, California.
Arden L. Albee Mars Surveyor Operations Project Scientist Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
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Education: |
Arden L. Albee has served as Project Scientist for the Mars Observer and Mars Global Surveyor Missions since 1984. (1984 --) Professor of Geology and Planetary Science and Dean of Graduate Studies, California Institute of Technology (1978-1984) Chief Scientist, Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Professor of Geology, California Institute of Technology (1959- -) Professor of Geology, California Institute of Technology Petrologic, microprobe, and isotopic investigations of metamorphic rocks; Elemental partition between coexistent rock-forming minerals; Petrogenetic grids for metamorphic processes; Improvements in electron microprobe analysis; Investigator of returned lunar samples. Consultant, geologic site selection and probability of surface faulting. Regional geologic mapping, Panamint Range, California. Field investigations, Vermont and Greenland. Advanced planning for planetary exploration. Development of dust analyzer for comet rendezvous mission. More than 200 publications. (1950-1959) Geologist, U. S. Geological Survey Regional geologic mapping and investigation of mineral resources --Vermont, Colorado, and Maine |
Statistics:
Born - May 28, 1928, Port Huron, Michigan.
Married - eight children, eleven grandchildren
Office:
Graduate Office - Mail Stop 02-31
California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA 91125
FAX 626-577-9246
[email protected]