Stamatios M. Krimigis Wins AIAA 2014 James A. Van Allen Space Environments Award Written 18 June 2014
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Honored for Pioneering Studies of the Radiation Environment Around all Solar System Planets
Krimigis has made several important contributions to our understanding of the radiation environments of planets within our solar system. Working with Professor James Van Allen, Krimigis determined that Earth’s magnetosphere contains helium in abundance compared to protons, allowing investigators to determine that the helium was not interplanetary in origin, but rather from the Earth’s ionosphere. Krimigis furthered his work in this area, leading the Active Magnetosphere Particle Tracer Explorer (AMPTE) program, a collaborative U.S.–German–British program that created the first man-made comet in space in 1984. Krimigis’ other accomplishments include placing an upper limit on the intrinsic dipole magnet moment of Venus; collaborating on the creation of the MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging mission (MESSENGER); serving as principal investigator for the Low Energy Charged Particle (LECP) experiment on Voyagers 1 and 2—which discovered that the plasma physics of Jupiter and Saturn are quite different than that of Earth; and serving as the principal investigator for the Cassini mission to Saturn and Titan, where instruments of his invention are returning neutral ion images of Saturn’s magnetosphere as well as in-situ measurements of electrons and ion composition.
Krimigis’ other honors include the 2004 Lifetime Achievement Award from JHU/APU; the Committee on Space Research’s 2002 Space Science Award; the Smithsonian Institution’s 2002 Trophy for Achievement; and three Aviation Week and Space Technology “Laurels in Space” awards—in 1996 and 2001, for the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) mission and in 2001, for the New Horizons mission. Krimigis is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, American Geophysical Union, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
For more information about the James A. Van Allen Space Environments Award or the AIAA Honors and Award program, please contact Carol Stewart at [email protected] or at 703.264.7623.
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