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David J. McComas

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
David McComas

Occupation
  
physicist, executive

David McComas httpswwwnasagovsitesdefaultfilesimagesDa
Born
  
May 22, 1958 (age 65) (
1958-05-22
)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.

Alma mater
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (B.S.) University of California, Los Angeles (M.S., Ph.D.)

Known for
  
space scientist and Principal Investigator of multiple space missions

Dyslexic advantage from slow to the interstellar frontier dyslexia and dr david mccomas


David John McComas (born May 22, 1958) is an American space plasma physicist, Vice President for Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory, and Professor of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton University. He had been Assistant Vice President for Space Science and Engineering at the Southwest Research Institute, full Adjoint Professor of Physics at the University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA), and was the founding director of the Center for Space Science and Exploration at Los Alamos National Laboratory. He is noted for his extensive accomplishments in experimental space plasma physics, including leading instruments and missions to study the heliosphere and solar wind: Ulysses/SWOOPS, ACE/SWEPAM, IBEX, TWINS, and Solar Probe Plus. He received the 2014 COSPAR Space Science Award and the NASA Exceptional Public Service Medal.

Contents

Biography

David J. McComas httpswwwnasagovsitesdefaultfilesimagesDa

McComas was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, received his undergraduate degree in Physics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1980, and his M.S. and Ph.D. in Geophysics and Space Physics from University of California, Los Angeles in 1985 and 1986. He began his space physics career in 1980 with early development work on the SWOOPS instrument for Ulysses, at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He moved to SwRI, in San Antonio, Texas, in 2000.

McComas holds six patents and is author of over 550 scientific and technical papers in the refereed literature, spanning topics in heliospheric, magnetospheric, solar, and planetary science as well as space instrumentation and mission development. Together these have garnered over 22,000 citations.

Space missions

McComas is Principal Investigator of NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) and TWINS (Two Wide-Angle Imaging Neutral-atom Spectrometers) missions, as well as the Solar Probe Plus – Integrated Science Investigation of the Sun instrument suite, and the Ulysses Solar Wind Plasma Investigation (SWOOPS) instrument. He is lead co-investigator for the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE) Solar Wind Electron, Proton, Alpha Monitor (SWEPAM), Jovian Auroral Distributions Experiment (JADE) instrument on JUNO, and Solar Wind Around Pluto (SWAP) instrument on New Horizons.

McComas is also co-investigator on the Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS), Cassini-Huygens Plasma Spectrometer (CAPS), GENESIS discovery mission, POLAR Thermal Ion Dynamics Experiment (TIDE), and IMAGE Midsized Explorer. At Los Alamos he was also Principal Investigator for a series of Magnetospheric Plasma Analyzers (MPAs) in geosynchronous orbit.

Boards and advisory committees

McComas serves on the Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) Science Associates, and was a member of the NASA Advisory Council (NAC) and chair of the NAC Science Committee. Previously he chaired NASA’s Solar Probe Science and Technology Definition Team (2003 -2008), NASA’s Sun-Earth Connections Advisory Subcommittee (SECAS) 2000-2003, and J. Robert Oppenheimer Memorial Committee (1997-1999).

McComas also serves on the board of directors of the Dyslexic Advantage, a 501c3, and is, himself, dyslexic. He also served on the advisory committee for the Scobee Education Center at San Antonio College.

Awards and honors

  • Recipient of the NASA Exceptional Public Service Medal (2015)
  • Recipient of the 2014 COSPAR Space Science Award
  • Recipient of the 2012 Adler Planetarium Outstanding Science Education Partner of the Year Award
  • Fellow (2010) American Physical Society
  • Fellow (2007) American Association for the Advancement of Science
  • Recipient of the 1993 American Geophysical Union James B. Macelwane Medal
  • Fellow (1993) American Geophysical Union
  • Recipient of 19 NASA Group Achievement Awards
  • References

    David J. McComas Wikipedia