David A. Spencer
David A. Spencer is the Founder and Chief Executive Officer for Vestigo Aerospace, Inc. As an aerospace engineer, Spencer designs and operates planetary space science missions, and develops space technology.[1][2] EducationSpencer received B.S. and M.S. degrees in aeronautics and astronautics from Purdue University in W. Lafayette, Indiana. He earned his Ph.D. from the Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology, completing a dissertation on automated proximity operations using relative orbital elements.[3] Spaceflight careerSpencer worked at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory from 1991 through 2008.[4] He served on the mission design and navigation team for the TOPEX/Poseidon mission, and he was the lead mission designer for Mars Pathfinder, responsible for the design of the interplanetary transfer and the entry, descent and landing (EDL) trajectory.[5] Spencer served as the mission manager for NASA's Mars Odyssey from 1997-2002, and Deep Impact from 2004-2005, leading the mission design and operations for the projects. He was the deputy project manager for the Phoenix Mars Lander, with a focus on EDL and surface operations. Spencer left JPL in 2008 to join the Aerospace Engineering faculty at Georgia Tech. At Georgia Tech, Spencer founded the Center for Space Systems, and was the Co-Director of the Space Systems Design Laboratory, a multi-disciplinary research and educational organization dedicated to the design, development and operations of advanced space systems and technologies. He initiated a small satellite program at Georgia Tech, establishing facilities for satellite fabrication, testing, tracking and operations. Spencer transitioned from Georgia Tech in 2016 to join the faculty of the School of Aeronautics and Astronautics at Purdue University, where he conducted research on small satellite applications, proximity operations, and aeroassist technologies. He led the Purdue Engineering Initiative on cislunar space, with the goal of expanding the orbital economy to encompass the cislunar environment. Spencer served as mission manager for The Planetary Society's LightSail 1 spacecraft, leading the mission design and system engineering of the solar sail demonstration project. LightSail 1 was launched on May 20, 2015.[6] Spencer led the team through a successful solar sail deployment almost a month later, before LightSail 1 reentered Earth's atmosphere.[7] Spencer is the project manager for a second LightSail spacecraft, LightSail 2, launched in 2019.[8] LightSail 2 was deployed into orbit by the Prox-1 spacecraft developed by Spencer and students at Georgia Tech.[9] LightSail 2 successfully demonstrated controlled solar sailing in Earth orbit.[10] Spencer returned to JPL from 2020 - 2024 to serve as the Mission System Manager for the Mars Sample Return Campaign, with the objective to return a geologically diverse set of Mars samples for Earth-based laboratory analysis. The Mars Sample Return Campaign is a joint effort between the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency (ESA). Spencer is the Founder and CEO of the 2019 startup Vestigo Aerospace, a space technology company that markets the Spinnaker product line of dragsails for the deorbit of space vehicles. Vestigo Aerospace incorporated in 2022 and has received NASA Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) funding to advance the technology. Vestigo raised $375,000 in seed funding from strategic investment firm Manhattan West in 2022. Vestigo's Spinnaker3 dragsail, hosted onboard an Astro Digital Corvus-Micro small satellite, is manifested to fly on the SpaceX Transporter-13 launch in March, 2025. Honors and distinctions
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