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ID132562
Title ProperTransforming solar system exploration
Other Title Informationthe origins of the discovery program, 1989-1993
LanguageENG
AuthorNeufeld, Michael J
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The Discovery Program is a rarity in the history of NASA solar system exploration: a reform program that has survived and continued to be influential. This article examines its emergence between 1989 and 1993, largely as the result of the intervention of two people: Stamatios "Tom" Krimigis of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), and Wesley Huntress of NASA, who was Division Director of Solar System Exploration 1990-92 and the Associate Administrator for Space Science 1992-98. Krimigis drew on his leadership experience in the space physics community and his knowledge of its Explorer program to propose that it was possible to create new missions to the inner solar system for a fraction of the existing costs. He continued to push that idea for the next two years, but it took the influence of Huntress at NASA Headquarters to push it on to the agenda. Huntress explicitly decided to use APL to force change on the Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the planetary science community. He succeeded in moving the JPL Mars Pathfinder and APL Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) mission proposals forward as the opening missions for Discovery. But it took Krimigis's political skill and access to Sen. Barbara Mikulski in 1993 to get the NEAR into the NASA budget, thereby likely ensuring that Discovery would not become another one-mission program
`In' analytical NoteSpace Policy Vol.30, No.1; Feb.2014: p.5-12
Journal SourceSpace Policy Vol.30, No.1; Feb.2014: p.5-12
Key WordsSpace History ;  NASA ;  Space Programme Organization - SPO ;  Applied Physics Laboratory - APL ;  Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous - NEAR ;  United States ;  Space Policy ;  JPL ;  Solar System ;  Reforms Program ;  Emerging Technology ;  Space Strategy