Raymond Heacock - Education and Work

Education and Work

Mr Heacock joined the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 1953 after receiving his Master of Science Degree in Engineering from the California Institute of Technology. Prior to joining the Voyager Project in 1972 as Spacecraft Systems Manager he had advanced through various positions of responsibility at the Laboratory. In October 1977 he was appointed Deputy Manager of the Voyager Project and became Manager last year. He is a member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics and has served as Secretary, Treasurer, Vice-President and President of the Board of Directors of the Caltech Alumni Association. Mr Heacock is a native of Santa Ana, California and now lives in La Crescenta. We are delighted to welcome him here today and to welcome also Mrs Heacock and their three children.

Since the inception of the Voyager Project in 1972, Mr Heacock has been deeply involved in guiding and shaping the successful development and operation of the sophisticated craft. The scientific data from the flight experiments carried aboard them have yielded startling new information on Jupiter and promise to reveal a wealth of knowledge about Saturn and Uranus. Mr Heacock has been a leader in the design, development and flight operations of these craft as well as of their scientific instruments complement. As Spacecraft System Manager, Deputy Project Manager and, currently, Project Manager he has contributed personally to the development of various advanced design features leading to the Project's outstanding success.

NASA's two robot spacecraft, Voyager 1 and 2, were launched in the Summer of 1977 on their journeys to Jupiter of more than 625 million miles. A fitting tribute to the efforts and ingenuity of many engineers and scientists, the spacecraft have now completed successfully the first stage of the exploration of the outer solar system. Voyager 1 is due to reach Saturn in November and will then leave the solar system. Voyager 2 will reach Saturn in August 1981 and may then go on to Uranus and Neptune. The complexity of the problems which have had to be overcome must have been immense and the brilliant team of scientists and engineers of which Mr Heacock has been a predominant leader have reached an unsurpassed level of scientific and engineering achievement. It is therefore most appropriate that the James Watt International Medal should be awarded to Mr Raymond L. Heacock.

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