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James L. Cooley

James L. Cooley
Affiliation:
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
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Summary

What does a math major do at NASA surrounded by engineers, physicists, and astronomers? Mathematicians provide excellent background to model physical systems. The physical systems can be related to a spacecraft (an attitude system, a propulsion system, etcetera), a spacecraft support system (such as a ground or space tracking system), or a system in nature (such as the earth's gravity field or atmosphere). Mathematics provides excellent background to model data (such as noisy or biased data taken from an attitude system or a tracking system) and determine the optimal information from the data. Mathematics also provides excellent background to understand geometric relationships and deal with changing relationships over different time scales (predicting ahead, in real-time, and after the fact).

After graduating from Pennsylvania State University and adding an additional year of graduate study in mathematics at the University of Maryland, I joined the Goddard Space Flight Center in 1963. Immediately there was the challenging problem of modeling the tracking system for the Apollo program. There continued to be many challenging problems in the area of flight dynamics: the area encompassing orbits and orbit maneuvers, attitude systems and attitude maneuvers, and spacecraft tracking. Other challenges involved modeling tracking from spacecraft (the tracking and data relay system) instead of from ground antennas, controlling spacecraft dipping low into the atmosphere, and controlling spacecraft around a mathematical point (the sun-earth calibration point).

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Publisher: Mathematical Association of America
Print publication year: 2014

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