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Gregory Errol Chamitoff (Ph.D.)
EDUCATION: Graduated from Blackford High School, San Jose, California, in 1980; received a bachelor of science degree in electrical engineering from the California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly), San Luis Obispo, California, in 1984; a master of science degree in aeronautical engineering from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), Pasadena, California, in 1985; and a doctorate in aeronautics and astronautics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1992. ORGANIZATIONS: Senior Member, American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics (AIAA), Institute of Electrical & Electronic Engineers (IEEE), Eta Kappa Nu Honor Society, Tau Beta Pi Engineering Society, Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society, National Space Society (NSS). HONORS: AIAA Technical Excellence Award (1998); NASA Silver Snoopy Award (1997); NASA/USA Space Flight Awareness Award (1997); C.S. Draper Laboratory Graduate Fellowship (1985-92); IEEE Graduate Fellowship (1985); Tau Beta Pi Fellowship (1984); Applied Magnetics Scholarships (1982, 83, 84); Academic Excellence Award (Cal Poly, 1984); Most Outstanding Senior Award (Cal Poly, 1984); President's Honor List (Cal Poly, 1981-84); Degree of Excellence and California Statewide Speech Finalist (National Forensic League, 1980); Eagle Scout (Boy Scouts of America, 1980). EXPERIENCE: As an electrical engineering student at Cal Poly, Chamitoff worked summers as a student engineer at Four Phase Systems, Atari, Northern Telecom, and IBM. He was also a lab course instructor for analog and digital circuit design. His undergraduate thesis was on the development and construction of a self-guided robot. While at MIT and Draper Labs (1985-91) Chamitoff worked on a variety of NASA projects. He performed stability analyses of shuttle attitude control for the initial release of the Hubble Space Telescope, developed flight control upgrades for redundancy in the Space Shuttle autopilot, and constructed models for vehicle design and trajectory optimization of the National Aerospace Plane. In his doctoral thesis, Chamitoff developed a new robust intelligent flight control approach for hypersonic single-stage-to-orbit launch vehicles. After graduation, he remained at Draper Labs on a team that developed an incremental attitude control system for Space Station Freedom. In 1993, Chamitoff became a visiting professor at the University of Sydney, Australia. There he led a research group in the development of autonomous flight control systems and taught courses in flight dynamics and control theory. In 1995, Chamitoff joined the International Space Station Motion Control Systems group in the Mission Operations Directorate at JSC (as a Rockwell employee). In that position, he led the development of several applications for the automation of spacecraft attitude control monitoring, prediction, analysis, and maneuver optimization. Chamitoff has published numerous papers on aircraft and spacecraft guidance and control, trajectory optimization, parameter estimation, and in-situ resource utilization on Mars. NASA EXPERIENCE: Selected by NASA in June 1998, he reported for training in August 1998. Astronaut Candidate Training includes orientation briefings and tours, numerous scientific and technical briefings, intensive instruction in Shuttle and International Space Station systems, physiological training and ground school to prepare for T-38 flight training, as well as learning water and wilderness survival techniques. Chamitoff is currently assigned to the Astronaut Office Space Station Operations Branch. He will serve in technical assignments until assigned to a space flight.
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Mission
Date: July, 2002 Mission Summary Aquanaut Profiles Expedition Journals Mission Pictures |
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