SETI bioastro: Fw: Plywood 'Rocket' Sparked a Spacecraft Career: Spaceflight Operations Enginee

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Fri Apr 04 2003 - 04:33:07 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Sent: Thursday, April 03, 2003 12:20 PM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: Plywood 'Rocket' Sparked a Spacecraft Career: Spaceflight Operations Engineer David Doody

    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/profiles/doody.cfm

    Plywood 'Rocket' Sparked a Spacecraft Career:
    Spaceflight Operations Engineer David Doody

    Contact: Enrico Piazza (818) 393-1095
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    April 2, 2003

    David Doody has been flying spacecraft since he was 5.

    Well, sort of flying them.

    He and his childhood friends built big mock-ups of Flash Gordon-style
    spacecraft, flew them outdoors and sometimes lit their "rocket engines" on
    fire. As a safer alternative, his dad built a plywood play rocket in the
    backyard of the family's Teaneck, N.J., home. The 16-foot-high,
    silver-painted structure could fit half a dozen kids inside. It immediately
    became the young Doody's favorite toy.

    "My friends and I could fly around the solar system in this real cool
    spaceship," he says. "I've been a space nut ever since."

    Nowadays, Doody is still flying spacecraft.

    Literally.

    He leads the flight operations controllers for Cassini, a NASA spacecraft on
    its way to arrive at Saturn in July 2004. Doody's team at NASA's Jet
    Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., is in charge of the data
    exchanges with the spacecraft through the Deep Space Network, a sort of
    communication hub between Earth and Cassini.

    Passion for Space Exploration

    Two things besides toy rockets fueled Doody's fascination with space.

    "Our next-door neighbor was a rocket fuel scientist," Doody says. "My father
    would talk to him about space and rockets and I thought rockets were the
    coolest things."

    Then, when Doody was 7, he was treated to his first peek through a
    telescope.

    "The sight of Jupiter and the sight of Saturn for me were compelling," he
    says. "These are awesome places. And they are in our own backyard, the solar
    system. "

    Spreading the Word

    Thankful for the circumstances that made him fall in love with space
    exploration, Doody finds many ways to return the favor.

    When a planet is in a good viewing position, he often borrows a
    200-millimeter (8-inch) diameter telescope from JPL's Astronomy Club and
    sets it up on the crowded streets of Old Town Pasadena. The line of people
    waiting to peek through the telescope soon stretches halfway down the block.

    "Many of them have never seen through a telescope before. Many are kids," he
    says. "I hope that I can share with others what was very exciting for me
    when I was 7 years old."

    The planet Saturn with its fascinating rings is probably the biggest hit, he
    adds.

    "It looks like a jewel. It's really beautiful, and people are astounded," he
    says. "People see why it's so fascinating and understand right away why you
    want to send a spacecraft to study it close-up."

    The author of many articles published in professional journals and in
    magazines, Doody showcased his talent as an educator in a widely used work,
    Basics of Space Flight, of which he is the lead author. This detailed
    overview of the physics behind space exploration and the basics of
    spacecraft design was originally written to train JPL flight controllers. It
    became available to the public in 1993 on the then sparsely-populated World
    Wide Web. The work won numerous awards and today it's used in physics and
    astronomy classrooms. Amateurs wanting to deepen their understanding of
    robotic space exploration can complete the course at their own pace.

    His latest teaching project is a Gravity Assist Mechanical Simulator.
    Resembling a stripped down pinball machine, the device illustrates how
    gravity assist works. Gravity assist is a technique used by spacecraft to
    save fuel and increase speed by exploiting a planet's orbital momentum.
    Diagrams and instructions to build the simulator are downloadable from the
    Web, as well as detailed information and prices of needed parts -- all
    available at hardware stores. For less than $70, teachers can build from
    scratch a three-foot wide machine.

    Reminiscent of his childhood toys, Doody also provides budding
    astro-explorers with downloadable spacecraft scale models.

    "I think the Web has such potential, I tried to do something different," he
    says. "Instead of just looking at pictures and reading words and just
    looking at movies and listening to sounds, I've put up some spacecraft scale
    models that can be downloaded and actually put together in three-dimensions.

    "If you build the Cassini model, for example, you'll know all about the
    spacecraft and its parts, not just words and pictures. You'll have to put
    the camera exactly here -- and you know exactly where it is, and how the
    spacecraft has to turn to use the camera."

    >From Pilot to Navigator

    After a stint in the Air Force, Doody, a commercial pilot, worked as an
    instructor for Japan Airlines. He then worked as a systems engineer on Santa
    Catalina Island, off the coast of Los Angeles, while living aboard a 46-foot
    sailboat with his partner Donald Whiting. They moved ashore to the Los
    Angeles area so that Doody could combine his passion for computers and
    teaching in a job with the Deep Space Network, NASA's antenna system that
    allows communications with spacecraft.

    As an engineer at JPL since 1985, Doody worked on the Voyager mission to
    outer planets and the Magellan mission to Venus before joining the Cassini
    mission.

    He also volunteers his time on PlanetTrek, a Planetary Society project to
    build a scale model of the solar system. With 10 sculptures at scale
    distances in Pasadena, the project will include artwork and information
    about each planet. Pluto will be considerably smaller than a green pea and
    placed just outside JPL -- five miles from the five-foot diameter Sun.

    Sharing his love for space exploration is a must, Doody says, given how
    lucky he has been.

    "To be able now to work on projects that are flying to the planets has been
    really a dream."


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