Gary L. Bennett

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Gary L. Bennett (born January 17, 1940) is an American scientist and engineer, specializing in aerospace and energy.[1] He has worked for NASA and the US Department of Energy (DOE) on advanced space power systems and advanced space propulsion systems. His professional career has included work on the Voyager, Galileo, and Ulysses space missions, and is currently working as a consultant in aerospace power and propulsion systems. He is also a science fiction author (The Star Sailors).

Biography

Bennett was born in

Pluto Fast Flyby (now New Horizons) mission and the TIMED
space physics mission.

Prior to coming to NASA, Bennett held key positions in DoE's space radioisotope power program, including serving as Director of Safety and Nuclear Operations for the radioisotope power sources that were used on the Galileo mission to Jupiter and that are being used on the Ulysses mission to explore the polar regions of the Sun. This same radioisotope power source design was then flown on the Cassini mission to Saturn and on the New Horizons mission to Jupiter.

Previous positions included Chief of the Research Support Branch in the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) where Bennett was instrumental in creating and managing NRC's reactor operational safety research program.

Bennett was the flight safety manager for the radioisotope power sources currently in use on the

Lincoln Laboratory's LES 8 and LES 9
communications satellites.

Bennett also worked as a physicist in the

Cleveland, Ohio. He did fundamental reactor safety research at what is now the Department of Energy's Idaho National Laboratory
(INL).

From 1980 to 1988, he was a member of or adviser to US delegations to the two subcommittees of the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space and he prepared the official US position papers on the use of nuclear power sources in outer space.

From 1988 to 1990, Bennett chaired the Steering Group of the Interagency Advanced Power Group (IAPG), the national coordinating group for federally sponsored space and terrestrial power research. During his tenure and under his initiative the IAPG saw its greatest increase in membership.

Bennett received his PhD in

Boise Junior College (now Boise State University
) in 1960.

Since 1995, he has been active in promoting the teaching of science (specifically evolution) and received the Friend of Darwin Award. Bennett has also been a champion of the First Amendment and was elected to the National Advisory Council of Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Selected works

Bennett has authored or coauthored over 160 technical papers, reports and articles on power, propulsion, and space missions.

Science fiction

  • G.L. Bennett (1980). The Star Sailors. .

Chapters in:

Awards

Associations

References

External links