| |
|||
|
Contact:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
|
August 26, 2002 - RELEASE: 02-161 NASA APPOINTS CONTOUR MISSION INVESTIGATION TEAM NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe today announced that Chief Engineer Theron M. Bradley Jr. will lead a team to investigate the apparent loss of the CONTOUR mission space probe. The investigation team will independently examine all aspects of the CONTOUR mission, which has been out of contact with controllers at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), Laurel, Md., since a scheduled engine firing Aug. 15. In
May, Bradley joined the agency as Chief Engineer to provide independent
technical review of NASA's programs and projects. He's a distinguished
U.S. Navy engineer who was instrumental in the initial design of the nuclear
propulsion plant for Nimitz class aircraft carriers and the advanced reactor
design for Los Angeles class submarines. Bradley also served as a civilian
with the U.S. Department of Energy and the Department of Defense in numerous
leadership and The team will include a team of internal NASA investigators from space science, as well as other aerospace disciplines, and external experts with extensive experience in accident examinations. The group is expected to report its initial findings to NASA Headquarters in six to eight weeks. Among
the team members selected to work with Bradley are retired Navy Admirals
J. Paul Reason and Joseph Lopez. Admiral Reason is a member of NASA's
Aerospace Safety Admiral
Lopez is one of the two flag officers in the U.S. Navy to achieve the
rank of four-star admiral after direct commission from enlisted service.
The retired admiral is the former commander of NATO forces in southern
Europe and has played a leadership role in numerous accident investigations.
He currently directs Global Government Operations as an Since
then, there has been no contact with CONTOUR. Commandspre-programmed into
the spacecraft's flight computer system, designed to instruct the spacecraft
to try various alternate Images
from a Spacewatch ground-based telescope at Kitt Peak, Ariz., show three
objects at the location where CONTOUR was predicted to be, images which
may indicate the spacecraft has Additional information about CONTOUR is available on the Internet at: http://www.contour2002.org |
|||