| I work primarily on designing
and developing an autonomous aerocapture guidance algorithm for future
Mars robotic missions as well as a pathfinder for a human Mars mission.
My specific duties include mathematical formulations of guidance control
laws and correlated adjunct variables, trajectory optimization development
and analysis, trajectory analysis as well as guidance tuning. Other duties
include supporting the development of operational requirements for beyond-Low
Earth Orbit (LEO) human exploration missions as well as supporting various
entry trajectory studies.
I am fascinated by flight and space travel. As a teenager,
I found myself searching for the answers to questions such as: "How
does an airplane fly?" and "How did we go to the moon?"
So, naturally, when it was time to select a major in college, I chose
aerospace engineering. And when it was time to start my co-op tour, I
selected NASA. I will have worked for NASA for 15 years this December.
I received a bachelor of science in aerospace engineering
from Texas A&M University, a masters of industrial engineering from
the University of Houston, and a doctorate of jurisprudence from the University
of Houston.
I have made presentations at elementary schools and currently
serve on a panel chaired by the Deputy Director of Stennis Space Center
which focuses on how to actively engage the public with human spaceflight. |