James Everett Lipp (July 3, 1910 – August 13, 1993)[1] was an American aerospace engineer. He attended California Institute of Technology (MS, 1934; PhD, 1935) and began his career at the Douglas Aircraft Company, staying there until 1948.[2] He then joined the missile division at the newly created Project RAND as one of the first four full-time employees, tasked by then Brigadier General Curtis LeMay to figure out how to launch orbiting satellites from a spaceship.[3] Lipp would later become the head of the aerospace division at RAND and subsequently, corporate director of development planning at Lockheed Corporation.[4] His recommendations to the Air Force in February 1947 helped contribute to the creation of the US civil and military satellite program during the Cold War.[5]
Selected work
Lipp, J. E., R. M. Salter Jr., and R. S. Wehner, et.al. (April 1951). "The Utility of a Satellite Vehicle for Reconnaissance". The Rand Corporation. R -217. pp. ix, 1-21, 28-39.
Lipp, J. E. & R. M. Salter (March 1954). "Project Feed Back Summary Report". The RAND Corporation. R -262, Volume II. pp. 109-10, Rand Library.
^U.S. Congress. House Committee on Science and Astronautics 1960, p. 67.
^Davies & Harris 1988, p. 109; Taubman 2003, pp. 62-71.
Bibliography
Abella, Alex (2009). Soldiers of Reason: The Rand Corporation and the Rise of the American Empire. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN9780156033442.
Davies, Merton E.; Harris, William Robert (1988) Rand's Role in the Evolution of Balloon and Satellite Observation Systems and Related U.S. Space Technology. Rand Corporation.