Source: NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory
Dr. Firouz M. Naderi, manager of NASA's Mars
Exploration Program since April 2000, will broaden his oversight of endeavors to
study other parts of the universe, from Earth to distant galaxies, in a new
leadership position at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
 JPL's Dr. Firouz Naderi will become
the laboratory's Associate Director for Programs, Project Formulation and
Strategy, effective March 7. |
Related Links: + Mars Exploration
site
|
JPL Director Dr. Charles Elachi has announced that
Naderi will become JPL's laboratory's Associate Director for Programs, Project
Formulation and Strategy, effective March 7.
Elachi said, "Firouz was called on to lead the Mars
Program at JPL five years ago when the program had experienced some setbacks. He
helped restructure the program and has led it to some spectacular successes. Now
we are putting to a wider purpose the strength that Firouz has shown in
strategic planning of the Mars program. In his new role, he will help position
JPL to work with the rest of NASA in accomplishing the nation's full vision for
space exploration."
In the new position, besides overseeing JPL's broad
existing programs, Naderi will be in charge of long-term strategic planning for
JPL and will coordinate advance studies, acquisition of new missions, and
development of projects early in their life cycle.
The current deputy manager for Mars exploration, Dr.
Fuk K. Li, will become manager of that program. Peter C. Theisinger, project
manager for the Mars Science Laboratory mission in development, will succeed Li
as deputy manager of the Mars Exploration Program. Richard A. Cook, now
Theisinger's deputy, will become project manager of the Mars Science Laboratory
mission.
Two weeks ago, NASA honored Naderi with its highest
award, the Distinguished Service Medal, citing his "distinguished contribution
to space science and exploration."
Naderi joined JPL in 1979 and has held a number of
program and project management positions. For four years prior to managing the
recent successes of NASA's Mars program, he managed the NASA's Origins Program,
an ambitious plan to search for other Earths around other suns. Earlier
positions included program manager for space science flight experiments and
project manager for the NASA Scatterometer, which monitored winds from Earth
orbit. Naderi, who was born in Shiraz, Iran, and moved to the United States 40
years ago, holds three degrees in electrical engineering: a bachelor's from Iowa
State University in Ames, and a master's and doctorate from the University of
Southern California in Los Angeles. He lives in Pacific Palisades, Calif.
Li has been Deputy Director of the Mars Exploration
Directorate since 2004. JPL coordinates the Mars Exploration Program for all of
NASA, which currently has two spacecraft studying Mars from orbit, two rovers
active on the surface and four spacecraft in development.
From 2001 to 2004, Li was the Deputy Director of the
Solar System Exploration Directorate, and from 1997 to 2001, he managed NASA's
New Millennium Program, which develops and tests new technologies in space
flight for use in later science missions. Previously, he managed the Earth
Science Program, was project engineer for the NASA Scatterometer and was
involved in various radar remote-sensing activities. He earned his bachelor's
and doctorate degrees in physics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge, before joining JPL in 1979. He lives in Arcadia, Calif.
Theisinger has managed the Mars Science Laboratory
Project since February 2004. The project is developing a rover with a science
payload more than 10 times as massive as those on the current Mars Exploration
Rovers. The project's advanced landing techniques will make many of Mars' most
intriguing regions viable destinations for the first time.
Theisinger managed the Mars Exploration Rover Project
from its inception in mid-2000 until after the successful landings and initial
surface operations of the rovers Spirit and Opportunity. Prior JPL positions
included deputy manager for the Mars Sample Return Project, mission support and
development manager for the Mars Surveyor Operations Project and project
engineer for the Mars Global Surveyor spacecraft development project. He first
joined JPL in 1967, the year he received a bachelor's degree in physics from the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. He lives in La Crescenta, Calif.
Cook became deputy project manager for Mars Science
Laboratory in June 2004 after four months as project manager for the Mars
Exploration Rovers. He had earlier helped lead the development and operation of
Spirit and Opportunity as flight systems manager and deputy project manager.
Previously, Cook was flight operations manager for the Mars Pathfinder Project,
which put a lander and small rover on Mars in 1997. He joined JPL in 1989 and
worked on the Magellan mission to Venus prior to Pathfinder. He earned a
bachelor's degree in engineering physics from the University of Colorado,
Boulder, and a master's in aerospace engineering from the University of Texas,
Austin. He lives in Santa Clarita, Calif.
JPL is managed for NASA by the California Institute
of Technology in Pasadena.