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Remembering New Horizons Co-Investigator Dr. David Charles Slater
New Horizons Web Site ^ | 8/12/2011 | Alan Stern

Posted on 08/12/2011 3:46:32 PM PDT by MikeD

I have written here more than once that on long space missions like New Horizons, mission teams form family-like bonds. Well, on May 30, the New Horizons family lost one of our own, co-investigator and friend, Dr. Dave Slater, of the Southwest Research Institute.

Dave grew up in Los Angeles, where his dad worked in the aerospace industry, including time in project Apollo. Dave was intensely interested in astronomy as a boy, and grew up determined to become a scientist. After earning undergraduate and master’s degrees in physics, Dave was commissioned as an officer in the U.S. Air Force, where he worked on a series of aircraft and spacecraft projects during technical assignments as an officer in Space Division in L.A. and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Dave then applied for and received permission to earn his Ph.D. while still in the Air Force; he was accepted into the Ph.D. program at Stanford University, where he specialized in engineering physics and the construction of ultraviolet optics and detectors for solar physics missions.

Dave joined the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in August 1993 as a post-doctoral researcher, immediately after earning his Ph.D.

At SwRI, Dave’s work focused on detector physics and instrumentation, space science, solar physics and planetary atmospheres. He was the project scientist and lead optical engineer for a wide range of spectrographic instruments including three planetary and solar physics sounding rocket instruments; a space shuttle payload; Rosetta-ALICE on ESA’s Rosetta comet orbiter spacecraft; the Alice instrument flying on the New Horizons spacecraft to Pluto and the Kuiper Belt; the LAMP (Lyman Alpha Mapping Project) on the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter mission; and the Juno-UVS for the Juno mission to Jupiter. Dave also took part in a large number of SwRI internal research projects, including one that took him to the South Pole with me in 1996.

Dave was part of New Horizons from its inception. In fact, he worked on instruments for Pluto missions for over seven years before New Horizons even came into being. Much of what we will learn about Pluto's atmosphere when New Horizons arrives at Pluto in 2015 would not have been possible without Dave's work.

Dave was intensely family oriented, an athletic long distance runner, and loved the outdoors.

I traveled and worked with Dave extensively from 1993 to 2007, to nearly every continent on Earth, to countless scientific and engineering meetings, to nine launch campaigns, a solar eclipse, and the South Pole. He was, without a doubt, the cheeriest individual I, and I think many people, have ever worked with.

In May 2007, Dave learned he had malignant brain cancer. Despite all odds, most giving him a year or less to live, he resolved to persevere, continuing his work and continuing to raise his sons as he always had. Despite brain surgeries, intense radiation and debilitating biweekly chemo treatments, Dave’s personality was forever sunny, and his drive to see his younger sons grow to be men was resolute.

Against all odds, Dave survived for four years and was rewarded to see his sons reach early manhood.

Beyond his contributions to New Horizons and other space ultraviolet projects, Dave’s contributions to SwRI’s development as a leading institution in the space sciences were fundamental. Few people realize just how important a role he played in that success, but nearly everyone remembers what a joy he was to work with and to travel with, and what a better place he made the workplace every day.

Dave is survived by his wonderful wife, Susan; his mother and two sisters; and three fine sons—twins Marc and Matthew, and their older brother Michael.

On behalf of everyone who knew him on the New Horizons project, I’ll close by saying that we miss Dave’s deep expertise, his boundless energy, his wide smile and his infectious personality, every single day.

- Alan Stern


TOPICS: Astronomy; Military/Veterans; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: astronomy; nasa; obituary; scientist
I know it's a bit of a vanity, but my mentor and friend Dave Slater passed away in May after a four-year fight with brain cancer. This tribute was written by Alan Stern, PI of New Horizons, who hired Dave in 1993. Dave designed, built, and tested a lot of spaceflight hardware, including part of the just-launched Juno mission to Jupiter.

He was a really great guy who taught me most of what I know about Space work, and I thought the FR community would like to know just how great he was. Thanks, and you may return to your regularly scheduled politicking now...

1 posted on 08/12/2011 3:46:37 PM PDT by MikeD
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To: MikeD

I clicked the “Military” keyword because Dave was an officer in the Air Force for six years, a graduate of the Air Force Institute of Technology, and was honorably discharged as a Captain.

He is buried near Randolph Air Force Base, and fittingly during the funeral, as two airmen presented the flag to his wife, two T-38s flew overhead.


2 posted on 08/12/2011 3:49:33 PM PDT by MikeD (We live in a world where babies are like velveteen rabbits that only become real if they are loved.)
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To: MikeD

New Horizons is the most exciting thing going on in “local” space there days. I’ve been watching with interest since the beginning.

http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/


3 posted on 08/12/2011 3:53:43 PM PDT by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin)
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To: cripplecreek

Ditto....I love this mission along with Cassini and now Juno.....Most people I know unfortunately do not think this is of any importance or never or never heard of it....


4 posted on 08/12/2011 4:02:50 PM PDT by geege
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The FReepathon Is 43 Days Old

If We Don't Meet Our Budget This Is Your Booby Prize

Click The Pic To Donate

5 posted on 08/12/2011 4:14:57 PM PDT by DJ MacWoW (America! The wolves are here! What will you do?)
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To: MikeD

When I first clicked on the article I thought it was about the movie “Event Horizon” with the spaceship zooming in to Hell via blackwhole. o.o

Interesting article anyway, nice read


6 posted on 08/12/2011 4:23:54 PM PDT by nerdwithagun (I'd rather go gun to gun then knife to knife.)
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To: geege

Doctor Dave is getting a preview of Pluto and everything else now.


7 posted on 08/12/2011 4:32:45 PM PDT by cripplecreek (Remember the River Raisin)
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