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Dr. Nicholas White
Chief
Laboratory for High Astrophysics
Dr. Nicholas White, Chief of the Laboratory for High
Energy Astrophysics (LHEA), is responsible for the planning,
coordination, technical direction and administrative management of the
research and development activities undertaken and carried out by the
Laboratory. He was appointed to the position in February 2000. Dr White
is also the Director of the High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive
research Center (HEASARC) and Project Scientist for the Constellation-X
and Astro-E2 missions. Prior to this White was the head of the X-ray
Astrophysics Branch within the LHEA from 1995 - 2000 February. Between
1990 and 1995 White was the head of the Office of Guest Investigator
programs. He was the ASCA project scientist from 1992 to the end of
mission activities in 2000.
Dr White has been involved in X-ray astronomy for
all of his research career, beginning in 1973 when he began his PhD
thesis work at University College London's Mullard Space Science
laboratory. His career spans a large part of the modern history of
X-ray Astronomy and he has made a number of key discoveries, with over
100 publications in refereed journals. The topic of his 1977 Phd thesis
"The Variability of Several Galactic X-ray Sources" included data
obtained with a UK contributed instrument on the NASA Copernicus
(OAO-3) satellite and the UK Ariel V satellite and resulted in the
discovery of many new X-ray pulsars. In 1978 White moved to Goddard
Space Flight Center as a University of Maryland Research fellow to
continue his research utilizing data from the HEAO-1, and the Einstein
(HEAO-2) Observatories. In 1982 White joined the European Space Agency
(ESA) to work on the EXOSAT mission, where he was responsible for the
science team at the Science Operations Center in Darmstadt Germany. In
1984 White became the EXOSAT project scientist at ESTEC in Holland and
lead the effort to create the mission archive, which was one of the
first to be made available over the internet. In 1990 White returned to
GSFC to be the Director of the HEASARC. The HEASARC was the first of
several successful wavelength specific active data archives designed to
serve the astrophysics community, for which he was awarded the Goddard
Space Flight Center Exceptional Achievement Award in May 1994.
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