William Hayward Pickering Collection

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

William Hayward Pickering Collection http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8nc6260 No online items William Hayward Pickering Collection Collection processed and description prepared by Larry Dumas. Pasadena Museum of History Research Library and Archives 470 West Walnut Street Pasadena, California 91103-3594 Phone: (626) 577-1660, Ext. 13 Fax: (626) 577-1662 Email: [email protected] http://www.pasadenahistory.org 2013 Note ©2013 Pasadena Museum of History. All rights reserved. William Hayward Pickering WHP 1 Collection William Hayward Pickering Collection Collection number: WHP Title: William Hayward Pickering Collection Dates: 1931 - 2009 Extent: 44 Boxes Repository: Pasadena Museum of History Research Library and Archives 470 West Walnut Street Pasadena, California 91103-3594 Abstract: William Hayward Pickering was the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's Director from 1954-1976. He oversaw the Explorer, Ranger, Surveyor, Mariner, Mercury, Viking and Voyager missions. Following retirement he was involved in private industry including the Research Institutes of Saudi Arabia's University of Petroleum and Minerals, the Pickering Research Corporation, and Lignetics, Inc. He received the National Medal of Science among many other awards. Languages: English Administrative Information February 2013 Machine readable finding aid created by Victoria Brennan. Collection processed and description prepared by Larry 2013 Dumas. Access: Collection is open to the public for research. Use is restricted by rules intended to protect and preserve the materials in good condition for the future. For additional information please contact Pasadena Museum of History. Publication Rights: Use of the materials is governed by all applicable copyright law. Pasadena Museum of History reserves the right to restrict any materials from reproduction at any time. Property rights reside with Pasadena Museum of History. Literary rights are retained by the creators of the records and their heirs. The Museum's physical ownership of the materials in its collection does not imply ownership of copyright. It is the user's responibility to resolve any copyright issues related to the use and distribution of reproduced materials. For permission to reproduce or to publish, please contact Pasadena Museum of History. Preferred Citation: Suggested citation of these records is: [Identification of item], William Hayward Pickering Collection, Box [#], Folder [#], Research Library and Archives, Pasadena Museum of History. Biography/Biographical Notes*: William H. Pickering (WHP) was born in Wellington, New Zealand, December 24, 1910. He received his Bachelor of Science degree from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in 1932 and his Master of Science degree, (Physics) in 1933. He was a Coffin Fellow 1933-35 and received his Doctorate degree (Physics) in 1936. He lectured at Caltech and the University of Southern California (USC) during the intervening years in the fields of physical sciences, electrical engineering, cosmic rays, microwave propagation, cosmic ray engineering, and cosmic ray sondes. Pickering became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1941. Pickering was invited to join Caltech's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in 1944 as a result of his experience in the design and use of telemetering devices, which he subsequently developed for the Laboratory's high-velocity research vehicles. Beginning in 1949 he headed the Corporal and Sergeant missile programs, and in 1954 he succeeded Louis Dunn as Director of JPL. In 1958, a few months after the Soviet Sputnik, JPL successfully launched Explorer I. That same year JPL, which had been under the direction of the Army, was transferred to the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) with the responsibility for unmanned exploration of the moon and planets. Under Pickering's direction, the Laboratory launched the Ranger missions to the moon, the Surveyor missions to the moon, the Mariner missions to Venus and Mars, and the first gravity assist mission to Mercury via Venus. JPL also designed the Viking orbiter of Mars and designed and built the Voyagers for the outer planets mission during his tenure as Director. Following his retirement from JPL in 1976, he directed the Research Institutes of Saudi Arabia's University of Petroleum and Minerals. He returned to California in 1978 and established the Pickering Research Corporation for space related projects, ranging from a report on nuclear safety to an image processing system in China. In 1983, responding to the energy crisis, he formed Lignetics, Inc., to manufacture wood pellet fuel from wood waste. William Hayward Pickering WHP 2 Collection Pickering has been awarded many national and international awards and prizes, including the National Medal of Science, Honorary Knight Commander of the British Empire, Spirit of St. Louis Medal of Science, NASA Distinguished Service Medal, Columbus Gold Medal, the first Francois-Xavier Bagnoud International Aerospace Prize and the Japan Prize, among others. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a founding member of the National Academy of Engineering. * Excerpted and abridged from the JPL archives Acquisition Information: The main body of the collection was organized and transferred to the Museum by Douglas J. Mudgway with the permission of William Pickering's widow, Inez Chapman Pickering, and his daughter, Anne Elizabeth (Beth) Pickering Mezitt. Mudgway worked with Dr. Pickering from 2002 until his death in 2004 during the preparation of his book, William H. Pickering - America's Deep Space Pioneer (NASA SP-2008-4113). The material in the collection came mainly from Dr. Pickering's personal office in Altadena, California, from the holdings of family members, and from material collected by Douglas J. Mudgway in the course of research for his book. Mudgway's holdings were transferred to the Museum in a series of shipments in 2008. Each box in the shipments contained a separate category of records, usually arranged in chronological order. This organization has been preserved in the Museum's collection, with minor rearrangement to facilitate the location of items of interest by researchers. Anne Elizabeth (Beth) Pickering Mezitt later facilitated the transfer of other family mementos and the extensive collection of honors and awards. Abstract/Scope and Content: Documents in the collection include records related to JPL and the military, NASA/JPL photos, business affairs, India/Arabia/China interactions, speeches and publications, correspondence, professional society activities, clippings, mementos, and books. Included are the files of Victoria L. Melikan, Special Assistant to the Director, JPL and the Harold Wheelock Collection of speeches. The collection of speeches, dating from the early 1950s to the early 2000s, offers a comprehensive survey of his thoughts on scientific research, space exploration, energy production and usage, the effect of science and technology on society, and forecasts for the future in these areas. Audiovisual material includes radio and TV appearances by Pickering and extensive late life interviews of Pickering by Mudgway. Certificates, trophies, and other mementos in the collection honor Pickering as a scientist, a leader in the exploration of space, and a vital force in community and professional affairs. Key to Arrangement/Container List: The collection is organized in 15 subgroups by subject or material. Subgroups: Box JPL and the Military 1-3 Background Biographical Information 3 NASA/JPL Photos 4 Business Affairs 5-14 India/Arabia/China 15-16 Speeches and Papers 17-23 Honors, Citations, and Awards 24-25 Professional Society Records 26-27 Miscellaneous Projects and Correspondence 27-29 Mementos, Clippings and Remembrances 29-30 Reports, Booklets and Brochures 31-33 Awards, Trophies and Miscellaneous 34-39 Scrapbooks and Photo Albums 40-43 Audiovisual 44 Controlled Access Headings: A portion of the names, corporations and places found in Pasadena Museum of History's Library and Archives local finding aid. Personal Names: Allen, Lew Amhurst, Gillian Anderson, Carl David William Hayward Pickering WHP 3 Collection Anderson, Senator Ken Avery, R. Stanton Beckman, Arnold O. Brown, Dr. Harold Brown, Gov. Edmund Davis, Gov. Gray Dennis, Michael Aaron DeVorkin, David H. Digby, J. DuBridge, Dr. Lee A. Dumas, Larry Duncan, Capt. John G. Dunn, Louis Farrero, Councilman John Ford, President Gerald R. Gardner, Dr. John W. Gillespie, Rollin Hall, R. Cargill Harford Hibbs, Dr. Albert R. Horner, Richard E. Hunt, Lee Kellogg, Will Kelly, Paul Lanterman, Frank Logsden, George Logsden, John MacLean, William B. Malina, Frank McLean, William B. Megerian, G. K. Melikan, Victoria L. Mezitt, Anne Elizabeth (Beth) Pickering Millikan, Robert Moss, Senator Mudgway, Douglas J. Murray, Bruce Myers, Dale Naugle, Dr. John E. Neal, Roy Needell, Allan Neher, H. Victor Niemirowicz Ordway, Federick I. Parks, Robert Pickering, Inez C. Ramo, Simon Rechtin, Eberhart William Hayward Pickering WHP 4 Collection Rubenstein Russell, Senator Newton R. Siverstein, Abe Stewart, Homer J. Stoller, Morton J. Stone, Ed Taft, Senator Thomas, Shirley Tucker, Ken Tunney, Senator Van Allen, J. A. von Braun, Werner von Karman, Theodore Wayland, Harold Webb, James E. Wheelock, Harold Williams, Ulric Yang, Dr. Corporate Names: Jet Propulsion Laboratory National Aeronautics and Space Administration California Institute of Technology Place Names: California Pasadena, California Subgroup: JPL and the Military Series: Early JPL Box 1, Folders 1-4
Recommended publications
  • United States Rocket Research and Development During World War II
    United States Rocket Research and Development During World War II Unidentified U.S. Navy LSM(R) (Landing Ship Medium (Rocket)) launching barrage rockets during a drill late in the Second World War. Image courtesy of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. and jet-assisted takeoff (JATO) units for piston-pow- Over the course of the Second World War, rockets ered attack fighters and bombers. Wartime American evolved from scientific and technical curiosities into rocket research evolved along a number of similar and practical weapons with specific battlefield applications. overlapping research trajectories. Both the U.S. Navy The Allied and Axis powers both pursued rocket re- and Army (which included the Army Air Forces) devel- search and development programs during the war. Brit- oped rockets for ground bombardment purposes. The ish and American rocket scientists and engineers (and services also fielded aerial rockets for use by attack their Japanese adversaries) mainly focused their efforts aircraft. The Navy worked on rocket-powered bombs on tactical applications using solid-propellant rockets, for antisubmarine warfare, while the Army developed while the Germans pursued a variety of strategic and the handheld bazooka antitank rocket system. Lastly, tactical development programs primarily centered on both the Army and Navy conducted research into JATO liquid-propellant rockets. German Army researchers units for use with bombers and seaplanes. Throughout led by Wernher von Braun spent much of the war de- the war, however, limited coordination between the veloping the A-4 (more popularly known as the V-2), armed services and federal wartime planning bodies a sophisticated long-range, liquid-fueled rocket that hampered American rocket development efforts and led was employed to bombard London and Rotterdam late to duplicated research and competition amongst pro- in the war.
    [Show full text]
  • My Father, Frank Joseph Malina (1 ), Was Born a Hundred Years Ago on October 2 1912 in Brenham,Texas.The Son of Czech Immigrants
    My father, Frank Joseph Malina engineering practice. (1 ), was born a hundred years Engineering was often a trial ago on October 2 1912 in and error affair; Von Karman Brenham,Texas. The son of believed that you could make Czech immigrants, his parents things scientifi cally. My father were music teachers, but had went on to become a leading run grocery stores and a hotel; pioneering of American they wanted their son to be a Rocketry and, with Von Karman, musician. Music was a founder of NASA's Jet respectable profession; my Propulsion Lab. The team led by father went on to become a my father is credited with rocket scientist, a field that was launching the first human-made not respectable did not exist object into space. when he was born. When my father started working Brenham was a small farming on rockets he was a student; community and my father tells of his fellow students were all his boredom and finding refuge headed for the booming in the town library. There, among aeronautics industry, the other books, he read Jules internet of its ti me; they couldn't Verne and became infected with believe he would waste his the dream of space travel. And education on a field as absurd to go to space you had to make as rockets. Rockets were in things, invent things. such bad repute that they use the word Jet Propulsion rather My father majored in mechanical than the word Rockets. My engineering atTexas A and M father and a motley group of and went on to study students started making aeronautics at the California rockets.
    [Show full text]
  • Astronautique
    Astronautique par Jean CHEYMOL * Le mot et la chose ne surprennent plus les jeunes d'aujourd'hui. Télévi­ sion, journaux et surtout romans d'anticipation les ont saturés de ces faits qui n'épatent guère plus que les gens de notre génération. En allait-il autrement il y a cinquante ans ? A cette époque, même après avoir lu Jules Verne les allusions aux voyages dans la Lune ne faisaient pas sérieux ! Pour ma part je dois faire amende honorable à cause de mon incrédulité moqueuse. Parcourant vers 1928 un journal d'information scientifique, j'y découvris avec effarement la création d'un prix international d'Astronautique [Esnault-Pelterie (1)] devant être attribué par la Société Astronomique de France « au meilleur travail scientifique original, théorique ou expérimental, capable de faire progresser l'une des questions dont dépend la réalisation de la navigation intersidérale ou d'augmenter les connaissances humaines dans l'une des branches touchant à la science astronautique ». Fusée pour aller dans les astres ! Pourquoi pas pour entrer en contact avec leurs habitants ! Vous voyez d'ici l'ironie facile en salle de garde envers les lunatiques de la Société Astronautique de France et les créateurs d'une telle récompense (2). Et cependant en notre temps la prospection vers les planètes progres­ sent d'année en année : (*) Séance de la Société Française d'Histoire de la Médecine du 22 avril 1972, jour de l'alunissage d'Apolo XVI. (1) Le mot « astronautique » fut donné par J.H. Rosny aîné, alors Président de l'Académie Goncourt et membre du Comité d'attribution du prix.
    [Show full text]
  • February 2021 | Page 1
    Featured Stories "You’re not on sabbatical or vacation. It’s an unusual situation where you’re involuntarily isolating," says Science Writer Jay Thompson. Facing a Pandemic By Yourself By Celeste Hoang Weary of the company in your pandemic bubble? Imagine if the only company were you. When even those with loved ones feel lonely, when thousands die and thousands more risk their lives to save some, the alone are easily overlooked. There isn’t exactly an ad one can place to seek a friend for what sometimes feels like the end of the world. For the many JPLers living alone through this pandemic, admitting to hardship can feel embarrassing when compared to the struggles of healthcare workers or parents with young children. But while a physical bubble of one is safe and quiet, the mind knows no rest. JPLers have coped in different ways. Some dove into therapy and self-reflection. Some said hello and goodbye to relationships—sometimes doing both during lockdown. Others ran marathons as metaphors to keep moving. Universe | February 2021 | Page 1 For the most part, they just endured, safely staying within their own homes—and privately navigating the highs and lows on their own—until the world sees this through. These are a few of their stories. Eric Oij on a recent solo trip to Lake Mono, California. Eric Oij It’s no surprise that Eric Oij—jolly, gregarious, and easy to laugh—is a self-described extrovert. That personality type, of course, has been a source of torment for the 37-year-old software engineer during the pandemic.
    [Show full text]
  • IGNITION! an Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants by John D
    IGNITION! U.S. Navy photo This is what a test firing should look like. Note the mach diamonds in the ex­ haust stream. U.S. Navy photo And this is what it may look like if something goes wrong. The same test cell, or its remains, is shown. IGNITION! An Informal History of Liquid Rocket Propellants by John D. Clark Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. George Santayana RUTGERS UNIVERSITY PRESS IS New Brunswick, New Jersey Copyright © 1972 by Rutgers University, the State University of New Jersey Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 72-185390 ISBN: 0-8135-0725-1 Manufactured in the United Suites of America by Quinn & Boden Company, Inc., Rithway, New Jersey This book is dedicated to my wife Inga, who heckled me into writing it with such wifely re­ marks as, "You talk a hell of a fine history. Now set yourself down in front of the typewriter — and write the damned thing!" In Re John D. Clark by Isaac Asimov I first met John in 1942 when I came to Philadelphia to live. Oh, I had known of him before. Back in 1937, he had published a pair of science fiction shorts, "Minus Planet" and "Space Blister," which had hit me right between the eyes. The first one, in particular, was the earliest science fiction story I know of which dealt with "anti-matter" in realistic fashion. Apparently, John was satisfied with that pair and didn't write any more s.f., kindly leaving room for lesser lights like myself.
    [Show full text]
  • A Fényjátékosok: Kepes György És Frank J. Malina
    A FÉNYJÁTÉKOSOK, KEPES GYÖRgy és FRank J. MALIna A TUDomány és A MűVésZET MEtsZésPontján THE PLEASURE OF LIGHT, GYÖRGY KEPES AND FRANK J. MALINA AT THE INTERSECTION OF SCIENCE AND ART 1 A FÉNYJÁTÉKOSOK, A fényjátékosok, THE PLEASURE OF LIGHT, Kepes György és Frank J. Malina a tudomány és a művészet metszéspontján KEPES GYÖRgy és FRank J. MALIna GYÖRGY KEPES AND FRANK J. MALINA A TUDomány, A MűVésZET és AT THE INTERSECTION OF ART, SCIENCE THE PLEASURE OF LIGHT, A TEchnoLógIA MEtsZésPontján AND TECHNOLOGY György Kepes and Frank J. Malina at the intersection of science and art Czeglédy Nina és Kopeczky Róna Nina Czeglédy and Róna Kopeczky 2010. szeptember 3 – november 21. I 3 September – 21 November, 2010 A tudományos felfedezésekbe és a ha- In the beginning of the 20th century, ladásba vetett hit alapvetően megha- faith in progress and scientific discov- kurátorok | curated by A Ludwig Múzeum és a kurátorok köszönetet tározta a XX. század eleji tudósok és ery had primary influence on artists Nina CZEGLÉDY, KOPECZKY Róna mondanak az alábbi személyeknek és művészek gondolkodását. Közöttük volt and scientists, including György Kepes intézményeknek | Special thanks to the Kepes György és Frank Malina is, akik szi- and Frank Malina. As a result of this be- asszisztensek | assistants following individuals and institutions BIRÓ Katalin, DÉKÁNY Dorottya, HAJDU Laura lárdan hittek abban, hogy a tudományos lief, a conviction that a scientific spirit BIRÓ Katalin; BÖLCSKEY Miklós; CRELLIN, Naomi megismeréssel együtt képzelhető el egy forms part of a new artistic synthe- kiállítás tervezés I exhibition design Clare; CSÁJI Attila; DÉKÁNY Dorottya; ALEXA Zsolt, MOLnáR Tímea, Rabb Donát, de LAVANDEYRA SCHÖFFER, Eléonore; újfajta művészi szintézis.
    [Show full text]
  • OH Pickering 1 Probes); Ranger 6 Video Failure; Success of Ranger 7 (1964)
    WILLIAM H. PICKERING (I) (1910–2004) INTERVIEWED BY MARY TERRALL November 7–December 19, 1978 ARCHIVES CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Pasadena, California Subject area Engineering, physics, administration, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, space flight Abstract Interview in four sessions in 1978 with William Hayward Pickering, professor emeritus of electrical engineering at Caltech and director (1954-1976) of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, begins with recollections of his upbringing in New Zealand. He enters Caltech as an undergraduate in spring term of 1929: influence of A. A. Noyes; travels in Europe during his junior year. Remains at Caltech as a graduate student in electrical engineering and then joins the faculty. Recollections of life at Caltech during the Depression and the war years, including emphasis on power transmission in its electrical engineering department, under Royal Sorensen, and subsequent expanding into electronics. Recalls his work with H. Victor Neher and R. A. Millikan on balloon-flight studies of cosmic rays; travels with them to India and Mexico. Contrasts leadership of Millikan and Lee A. DuBridge. Comments on barrage of Japanese incendiary balloons during the war. Early history of JPL: Theodore von Kármán, H. S. Tsien, Frank J. Malina. Long-range missile development for US Army; JPL’s collaboration with Wernher von Braun at Redstone Arsenal, Huntsville, Ala. Advent of Sputnik (1957); competition with Soviet Union. JPL’s move into space program with Explorer 1, first US satellite; establishment of NASA (1958); JPL becomes a NASA lab, administered by Caltech. Ranger program (lunar http://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechOH:OH_Pickering_1 probes); Ranger 6 video failure; success of Ranger 7 (1964).
    [Show full text]
  • The WFSW and Unesco in the Late 1940S Patrick Petitjean
    The WFSW and Unesco in the late 1940s Patrick Petitjean To cite this version: Patrick Petitjean. The WFSW and Unesco in the late 1940s. Petitjean, P., Zharov, V., Glaser, G., Richardson, J., de Padirac, B. and Archibald, G. (eds). Sixty Years of Sciences at Unesco, 1945-2005, Unesco, pp.78-80, 2006. halshs-00166625 HAL Id: halshs-00166625 https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-00166625 Submitted on 7 Aug 2007 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. A FAILED PARTNERSHIP WFSW and UNESCO in the late 1940s Patrick Petitjean (REHSEIS – CNRS and Paris 7 University) UNESCO has, since its establishment, developed direct links with the scientific community through partnership with the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU). The political climate of the Cold War, however, thwarted the establishment of a similar partnership with the World Federation of Scientific Workers (WFSW). Yet both UNESCO and WFSW promoted the same ideals: the use of science for peace and the welfare of humanity and scientists’ social responsibility in that regard. WFSW was established primarily on the initiative of two associations of scientific workers, in the United Kingdom and in France, and involved smaller associations in the dominions and in the United States of America.
    [Show full text]
  • Sex and Rockets Sex and Rockets ©2004, 1999 by John Car Ter and Feral House
    Sex and Rockets Sex And Rockets ©2004, 1999 by John Car ter and Feral House. All rights r eserved. ISBN 0-922915-97-0 Design by Linda Hayashi Cover design by Sean Tejaratchi 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Feral House 1240 W. Sims Way Suite 124 Port Townsend, WA 98368 www.feralhouse.com Sex and Rockets The Occult World of Jack Parsons John Carter Introduction by Robert Anton Wilson feral house Contents Introduction by Rober t Anton Wilson vii Preface xxv one The Early Years: 1914–1936 1 ockets two Parsons at Caltech: 1936–1939 15 three A Short History of the OTO sex and r 37 iv four Parsons’ Double Life: 1940–1942 47 five The Return to South Orange Gr ove Ave.: 1942–1945 83 six An Introduction to Enochian Magic 109 seven The Babalon Working, Part 1: Januar y–February 1946 119 eight The Babalon Working, Part 2: March 1946 135 nine Parsons’ Final Years: 1946–1952 155 ten Death and Beyond 177 Afterword 200 Photo Section 204 v Appendix A Primary Bibliography 227 contents Appendix B Secondary Bibliography 228 Appendix C Additional References 230 Index 234 vi sex and rockets A Marvel Walked Among Us by Robert Anton Wilson “I seem to be living in a nation that simply does not know what freedom is.” —John Whiteside Parsons 1 This book tells the life story of a very strange, very brilliant, very funny, very tormented man who had at least thr ee major occupations (or v ocations); he also had no less than four names.
    [Show full text]
  • Theodore Von Kármán
    NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES T HEODORE VON K Á RM Á N 1881—1963 A Biographical Memoir by H U G H L . D RYDEN Any opinions expressed in this memoir are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Academy of Sciences. Biographical Memoir COPYRIGHT 1965 NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES WASHINGTON D.C. THEODORE VON KARMAN May 11, 1881-May 7, 1963 BY HUGH L. DRYDEN HEODORE VON KARMAN, distinguished aeronautical engi- T neer and teacher, elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1938, died in Aachen, Germany, on May 7, 1963, four days before his eighty-second birthday. He was a person of unusual genius and vision. He made outstanding contributions to modern engineering, particularly to aeronautical engineer- ing and to other engineering fields based on solid and fluid mechanics. Von Karman himself attributed the origin of mod- ern applied mechanics to Felix Klein, his professor at the Uni- versity of Gottingen. Klein had visited the United States in 1893. As a result, in von Karman's words, "What Klein recog- nized and what has since become commonplace is the fact that alongside the massive resources of American technology a Eu- ropean industry could exist only if it held a superiority with re- spect to efficiency and saving of material. This appeared to be possible only if one could increase as much as possible the ac- curacy of the knowledge of technical processes and the accuracy of prior computation with the aid of chemistry, physics, me- chanics, and mathematics." Von Karman devoted his whole professional life to bridging the gap which had developed between theoretical workers who were content with general theorems and selected simple ex- 346 BIOGRAPHICAL MEMOIRS amples and engineers who were frustrated by the failures of theory and therefore resorted to pure empiricism and rule of thumb.
    [Show full text]
  • The Frank J. Malina Collection at the California Institute of Technology
    THE FRANK]. MALINA COLLECTION THE FRANK]. MALINA COLLECTION at the California Institute of Technology Guide to a Microfiche Edition EDITORS Judith R. Goodstein Carol H. Buge Institute Archives: Robert A. Mzllikan Memorial Library California Institute ofTechnology Pasadena, Caltfornia 1986 Cover: Frank Malina, Paris, 1961 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 86-81368 iv CONTENTS Page List of Illustrations. ...............•.•. .. vi General Introduction Chronological Biography.....•...... vii History of the Collection and Acknowledgments. x Notes on Use of the Collection ......•. xi Collection Index Section I Personal Correspondence. •• 1 Section II Jet Propulsion Laboratory. 9 Section III California Institute of Technology 19 Section IV Professional Organizations and Meetings • 20 Section V Aerojet General Corporation. 21 Section VI Theodore von Karman. 21 Section VII Manuscripts. 22 Section VIII Publication Correspondence 23 Section IX Technical Files Regarding History of Aeronautics 24 Section X Biographical and Personal. 25 Section XI Leonardo. •• 27 Section XII Activities in Art. 33 Section XIII International Academy of Astronautics. 35 Section XIV Lunar International Laboratory Committee. 35 Section XV Acta Astronautica. • 38 Section XVI International Astronautical Activities 38 Section XVII Personal Correspondence. 38 v LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Frank Malina at Muroc Field, California, 1942 .. Frontispiece Malina and other members of the GALCn team, 1936 ... 8 Holograph page of a letter to Theodore von K~rm~n, 1941 .. 16 Aerojet document,
    [Show full text]
  • Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    National Aeronautics and Space Administration Jet Propulsion Laboratory Meeting the challenges of robotic space exploration has resulted in new knowledge that has kept JPL a world leader in science and technology. The tools JPL has developed for space exploration have also proved invaluable in providing new insights and discov- eries in studies of Earth, its atmosphere, climate, oceans, geology and the biosphere. The ongoing invention of ever more-sensitive space sensors has also resulted in a myriad of technology ap- plications widely used for medical, industrial and commercial uses on Earth. JPL is a federally funded research and development facility man- aged by the California Institute of Technology for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. JPL’s Beginnings JPL’s history dates to the 1930s, when Caltech professor Theo- dore von Kármán oversaw pioneering work in rocket propulsion. Von Kármán was head of Caltech’s Guggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory. Several of his graduate students and assistants gath- ered to test a primitive rocket engine in a dry riverbed wilderness area in the Arroyo Seco, a dry canyon wash north of the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California. Their first rocket firing took place there on October 31, 1936. After the Caltech group’s successful rocket experiments, von From the roar of pioneering Space Age rockets to the soft whir of Kármán, who also served as a scientific adviser to the U.S. Army servos on 21st century robot explorers on Mars, the Jet Propul- Air Corps, persuaded the Army to fund development of strap-on sion Laboratory’s spacecraft have blazed the trail to the planets rockets (called “jet-assisted take-off”) to help overloaded Army and the universe beyond for more than 50 years.
    [Show full text]