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NASA JPL/NSTA Web Seminars:

Presenters

Greg Mehall
Greg Mehall Greg Mehall has 20 years of engineering experience with space flight missions including both flight hardware development and mission operations. He is currently a research specialist in the School of Earth and Space Exploration at the Arizona State University Mars Space Flight Facility. Since 1992 he has been the instrument manager, systems engineer, and mission manager for the Mars Observer and Mars Global Surveyor Thermal Emission Spectrometers (TES), the Mars Odyssey Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS), and the Mars Exploration Rovers Miniature Thermal Emission Spectrometers (Mini-TES) science investigations. As the instrument manager and systems engineer, he is responsible for the design, fabrication, testing and spacecraft integration activities for these instruments at Raytheon, Lockheed Martin Astronautics and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. As mission manager, he manages the daily mission operations activities for these experiments from the ASU and JPL Mars Space Flight Facilities. During the 5 years prior to his employment at ASU, he was an integral member of the engineering team that designed and built the ASU instruments at Raytheon Santa Barbara Remote Sensing. His fields of expertise include electronics, optics, and systems engineering. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from the University of Michigan and a Master of Science degree in electro-optical engineering from Stanford University.


Dr. Michael Meyer
Dr. Michael Meyer Dr. Michael Meyer is a Senior Scientist at NASA Headquarters in the Science Mission Directorate. He is the Lead Scientist for the Mars Exploration Program and Program Scientist for the Mars Science Laboratory rover mission, to be launched in 2009. He was the Senior Scientist for Astrobiology and Program Scientist for the 2001 Mars Odyssey. The Astrobiology Program, started with him as the Discipline Scientist, is dedicated to the study of the life in the universe. He has managed NASA's Exobiology Program and was also the Planetary Protection Officer for NASA. He has been an assistant research professor at the Desert Research Institute, University of Nevada, and has served as associate director and in research for the Polar Desert Research Center, Florida State University. In 1982, he was a visiting research scientist at the Culture Centre for Algae and Protozoa in Cambridge, England. Dr. Meyer's interest is in microorganisms living in extreme environments and he has conducted field research in the Gobi Desert, Negev Desert, Siberia, the Canadian Arctic, and Antarctica. Dr. Meyer earned a Ph.D. and M.S. in Oceanography, Texas A&M University, and B.S. in Biology, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.


Brian Grigsby
Brian Grigsby Brian Grigsby is the Assistant Director of the ASU Mars Education and Outreach Program within the Mars Space Flight Facility, School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University. He received his Bachelor Degree in Biology from Humboldt State University and a Masters Degree in Science Education from Chico State University. Brian is the Distance Learning Coordinator for the program and also assists in the creation of new Standards-based curriculum that allows educators nationwide to be involved in the exploration of Mars while continuing to meet their educational objectives. Brian taught high school science for 7 years in Redding, CA, where he was also a planetarium director for 5 years. While teaching, Brian was selected to participate in the highly competitive NASA workshops (NEWMAST).


In 2002, he received an IDEAS grant to develop a Virtual Field Trip with a NASA led expedition to the Licancabur volcano. He was the Education Public Outreach coordinator for that expedition where he spent 26 days in the Andes mountains, transmitting images, videos and stories back to the rural communities of northern California (via the Virtual Field Trip website). This expedition allowed students to communicate directly with scientists that were performing real scientific research. His position with the ASU Mars Education program allows for his love of teaching and his love of Mars exploration to meld together.


Dr. Joshua Bandfield
Joshua Bandfield Joshua Bandfield is a research specialist at the Mars Space Flight Facility at Arizona State University. He has a B.S. in Geological Sciences from UC Santa Barbara (1996) and a Ph.D. in Geology from Arizona State (2000). Josh has worked with infrared data from the Mars Global Surveyor, Mars Odyssey, and Mars Exploration Rover spacecraft to determine Martian surface compositions and atmospheric properties.


Paige Valderrama Graff
Paige Valderrama Graff Paige Valderrama Graff is the Assistant Director of the ASU Mars Education and Outreach Program within the Mars Space Flight Facility, School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University. She received her Bachelor Degree in Education from Indiana University and a Masters Degree in Multi-cultural Education from Northern Arizona University. Paige is the Mars Student Imaging Project Coordinator and also assists in the creation of new Standards-based curriculum that allows educators nationwide to be involved in the exploration of Mars while continuing to meet their educational objectives. Paige taught middle school mathematics for 11 years in Nogales, AZ where she also facilitated a mathematics, engineering, and science program for students and began a community-wide science program. While teaching, Paige was selected to participate in highly competitive NASA workshops, including an international remote sensing workshop held in France. Her position with the ASU Mars Education program allows for her love of teaching and her love of Mars exploration to meld together.


Dr. Jack D. Farmer
Dr. JackFarmer Jack Farmer received degrees in Geology and Paleobiology from California State University, Chico (B.A.), the University of Kansas (M.S.) and U.C. Davis (Ph.D.) and has held positions as Senior Museum Scientist and Lecturer (U. C. Davis, 1972-1977), Senior Petroleum Geologist (Exxon, Western Division Production, Los Angeles, 1978-1984), and a Visiting Professorship in the Dept. of Earth and Space Sciences at UCLA (1985-1990). Jack spent 1991-93 at NASA-Ames Research Center as a National Research Council Senior Postdoctoral Fellow, becoming a Civil Servant and Research Scientist in the Exobiology Branch there in 1994. In August, 1998, Jack joined the faculty of Arizona State University as Full Professor in the Department of Geological Sciences. His research interests include early biosphere evolution, the microbiology, paleontology and biosedimentology of extreme environments, early evolution of multicellular life, and strategies to explore for a past or present life elsewhere in the Solar System. He is on the editorial board of "The Astrobiology Journal", "The International Journal of Astrobiology" and "Geobiology", and is active in the Geological Society of America, the American Geophysical Union, and the Paleontological Society. He has held appointments as a member of NASA's Space Sciences Advisory Council and past Chair of the Mars Exploration Program Advisory Group. He was a member of NASA's Solar System Exploration Roadmap Development Team, the Mars 2001 and 2005 Science Definition Teams and the Mars 2003 Site Selection Advisory Group.


Dr. Farmer is presently a member of the National Research Council's Space Studies Board where he is helping to formulate national space policy. He directs ASU's Astrobiology Program and was a member of the Executive Council of NASA's Astrobiology Institute from 1998 to 2003. He is participating scientist on the Mars Exploration Rover (MER) mission, which is still exploring the red planet and is a team member for the Mars Science Laboratory Mission (MSL), which will be launched in 2009. He and his wife, Maria, live in Scottsdale (AZ) and are proud parents to their son, Brett Matthew and daughter, Bethany Rose. Jack loves music and art and when not working, loves to relax with his guitar, sketch pad and camera.


Kobie Boykins
Kobie Boykins Originally from Omaha, Nebraska, Kobie Boykins graduated Cum Laude from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York before becoming a mechanical engineer at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, CA. Boykins has worked on projects from Pathfinder and Mars Exploration Rovers to Ocean Surface Topography Mission over his ten years at the lab. He was involved in the NANOROVER/MUSES-CN microver technology and flight task and has worked many pre-proposal and proposals as a member of Team X. Boykins served as the CogE of the Mars Exploration Rover’s Solar Array Mechanisms and Structures and as a member of the ATLO team. Boykins is currently a technical group supervisor, leading the mobility and mechanisms group.




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Underwritten by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory