- James R. French
James R. French is a prominent U.S. aerospace engineer. While working for different
NASA contractors during the 1960s, he helped design, develop and test the rocket engines for the Apollo/Saturn launch vehicles and theApollo Lunar Module that enabled humans to walk on theMoon . He then joined NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) where he worked on the Mariner, Viking, and Voyager missions.French is a long-time advocate of a mission architecture for a
Mars probe, known asMars Sample Return with In-Situ Propellant Production, that would manufacture propellant from resources at the target planet to power a return trip, to dramatically reduce the size of the outbound vessel and the cost of the mission. He also published an article in the "Journal of the British Interplanetary Society " in 1989 recommending in-situ propellant production for a manned Mars mission, though he recommended that the technique would not be feasible until a Mars base were already well-established, due to the risks of relying on fueling a spacecrat with in-situ produced propellant.Robert Zubrin credits this paper as a forerunner of theMars Direct mission architecture, in which French's concern is resolved by devoting a separate spacecraft to the return trip, so that it can be verified as fueled and ready to launch from Mars before the crew launches from Earth. [cite book | first=Robert | last=Zubrin | title=The Case For Mars | publisher=Touchstone/Simon & Schuster | year=1996 | id=ISBN 0-684-83550-9 | pages=43, 58-59 ]French now works as a private space systems engineering consultant, and is a Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA). (ISBN 1-56347-539-1) with Michael Griffin, who is now the chief of NASA.
References
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