Randii R. Wessen | |
|---|---|
Randii Wessen at Wired NextFest | |
| Born | (1958-05-13)May 13, 1958 (age 67) Manhattan, New York |
| Alma mater | Stony Brook University University of Southern California University of Glamorgan (now theUniversity of South Wales) |
| Awards | NASA Exceptional Service Medal |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Planetary Exploration Experimental Economics |
| Institutions | University of Southern California's Earth & Space Science Institute Rockwell International California Institute of Technology Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
Randii Ray Wessen (born May 13, 1958) is an Americanastronauticssystems engineer specifically involved in planetary exploration,experimental economist, and writer.[1] Dr. Wessen has been an employee of theCalifornia Institute of Technology'sJet Propulsion Laboratory since 1984. He is currently the A-Team Lead Study Architect for JPL's Innovation Foundry. On the side, Wessen works with Dr. David Porter ofChapman University in the field of Experimental Economics, where they are designing a system to help allocate resources for building instruments on robotic deep space planetary spacecraft. This proposed system will build on the success of theCassini Resource Exchange and be applied to NASA's Outer Planet Flagship Missions.

Wessen's first job atJPL was as theVoyager Science Sequence Coordinator for theUranus andNeptune encounters. He helped coordinate science observation requests submitted by the eleven different Principal Investigators. These requests were integrated into one large sequence of events. These sequences of events were transmitted up to the Voyager spacecraft, executed as a series of encounter activities at the planet, and then transmitted back down to Earth as scientific data. Results were produced into charts, graphs, images, and videos, most of which had never been seen by individuals outside of the space program. He was most proud of personally building the post-encounter sequences for Neptune. It was this effort that earned himNASA's Exceptional Service Medal.[2]
From there he moved on to the Cassini Program which was building a spacecraft destined for Saturn.[1] On Cassini he moved from science to system engineering. After eight years he then changed focus and became the Telecommunications & Mission Systems Manager for theMars Program. He worked as an intermediary between the many Mars spacecraft in both development and operations and theDeep Space Network to ensure communication between them. This work included activity with theMars Global Surveyor, the2001 Mars Odyssey,European Space Agency'sMars Express,Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, and most famously theMars Exploration Rovers.[3]
Wessen then moved to theNavigator Program as its Program System Engineer dealing with the search of Earth-like planets around other stars. This program had two ground-based projects (theLarge Binocular Telescope Interferometer and the Michelson Science Center) and three space borne projects (theSpace Interferometry Mission, theTerrestrial Planet Finder – Coronagraph, and the Terrestrial Planet Finder – Interferometer).
Wessen is currently the A-Team Lead Study Architect for JPL's Innovation Foundry. This position involves leading a team of scientists and engineers with idea generation for future mission concepts, feasibility studies of these new concepts, and tradespace exploration to make sure that the mission concept going forward is the best one possible within constraints.
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