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American aerospace engineer (born 1964) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dava J. Newman (born 1964) is an American aerospace engineer. She is the director of the MIT Media Lab[1][2] and a former deputy administrator of NASA.[3] Newman is the Apollo Program Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics and Engineering Systems at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She has been a faculty member in the department of Aeronautics and Astronautics and MIT's School of Engineering since 1993.
Dava J. Newman | |
---|---|
13th Deputy administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration | |
In office May 15, 2015 – January 20, 2017 | |
President | Barack Obama |
Preceded by | Lori Garver |
Succeeded by | James Morhard |
Personal details | |
Born | 1964 (age 59–60) Helena, Montana |
Spouse | Guillermo Trotti |
Alma mater | University of Notre Dame (BS, 1986) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (dual SM, 1989; PhD, 1992) |
Newman earned her PhD in aerospace biomedical engineering, and Master of Science degrees in aerospace engineering and technology and policy all from MIT, and her Bachelor of Science degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Notre Dame. She is a member of the faculty at the Harvard–MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology and a MacVicar Faculty Fellow. She formerly directed the Technology and Policy Program at MIT (2003–2015) and the MIT Portugal Program since 2011.
Newman's research expertise is in aerospace biomedical engineering, investigating human performance in varying gravity environments. Newman was the principal investigator on four spaceflight missions.[4] The Space Shuttle Dynamic Load Sensors (DLS) experiment measured astronaut-induced disturbances of the microgravity environment[clarification needed] on mission STS-62. The Enhanced Dynamic Load Sensors experiment flew on board the Mir Space Station from 1996–1998. Newman was a Co-Investigator on the Mental Workload and Performance Experiment (MWPE) that flew on STS-42 to measure astronaut mental workload and fine motor control in microgravity.[5][6] She also developed the MICR0-G space flight experiment to provide a sensor suite and study human adaptation in extreme environments.[7] She was the MIT Principal Investigator on the Gravity Loading Countermeasure Suit, or Skinsuit,[8] which flew the International Space Station as an ESA technology demonstration from 2015 to 2017.[9]
Newman has promoted the development of space activity suits, namely the Bio-Suit, which provides pressure through compression directly on the skin via the suit's textile weave, patterning,[10][11] and advanced materials[12] rather than with pressurized gas. The suit is designed to help astronauts move around more easily than gas-filled suits allow.[13][14][15] These spacesuit technologies are now[when?] being applied to "soft suits" to study and enhance locomotion on Earth. Newman is the author of Interactive Aerospace Engineering and Design, an introductory engineering textbook, has published more than 300 papers in journals and refereed conferences, and holds numerous[16] compression technology patents.
In October 2014, Newman was nominated by President Barack Obama as deputy administrator of NASA,[17] but the U.S. Senate returned the nomination to the president in December 2014 when the 113th Congress adjourned without having confirmed her for the position.[18] Under Senate rules, in order for Newman to be confirmed, Obama needed to re-nominate her to the Senate of the 114th Congress, and he did so on January 8, 2015.[19][20] Her confirmation hearing before the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation was held March 25, 2015,[21] and the committee unanimously recommended approval by the full Senate.[22] She was confirmed by the Senate on April 27, 2015.[23] She resigned the position upon the end of the Obama administration on January 20, 2017.[24]
Select honors include named among World's Most Influential Women Engineers (2021),[25] Lowell Thomas Award (Explorer's Club (2018), the NASA Distinguished Service Medal (2017), Women in Aerospace Leadership Award (2017), and the Aerospace Medical Association's Henry L. Taylor Award for Outstanding Accomplishment in Aerospace Human Factors (2017). Her BioSuit spacesuit system has been exhibited at the Venice Biennial (2015), the American Museum of Natural History (2012), the Victoria and Albert and Museum, London (2012), the Paris City Museum of Science and Industry (2010), the London Museum of Science and Industry (2009), and the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2008). She was awarded Best Invention of 2007 by Time magazine, named in 100 Extraordinary Women Engineers in 2004, and received the Women in Aerospace National Aerospace Educator Award (2001).
Newman is a former housemaster of MIT's Baker House.[26][27]
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