Gerhard Schwehm

Gerhard Schwehm (born 13 March 1949, Ludwigshafen am Rhein, Germany) is Head of Solar System Science Operations Division for the European Space Agency (ESA). He was Mission Manager for the Rosetta mission until his retirement.

Education

Schwehm gained his PhD in Applied Physics from the Ruhr University, Bochum, Germany.

Career

Schwehm was a scientist at the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) modelling the dust environment for Halley's comet. He then became ESA's first planetary scientist, working on the Giotto mission that provided the first close-up images of a comet nucleus, Halley's Comet.

Schwehm became lead scientist on ESA's Rosetta mission in 1985, that will culminate in Rosetta looping around the Sun with comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014-2015.

Schwehm was mission manager for ESA's Smart-1 mission that impacted the Moon in September 2006 ending three years surveying the Moon.

Personal life

Schwehm is married with two children. [1]

gollark: Otherwise, it is like seven (8) apioforms.
gollark: The main thing shell has going for it is that it's very easy to write small things with and it has great support for concurrency and external process stuff.
gollark: Unfathomable quoting horror, lol no algebraic data types, poor error handling, bad control structures, essentially zero type system...
gollark: POSIX shell thing actually bad and not good?
gollark: Again, I am vegetarian.

References

  1. Accidental space scientist: An interview with Gerhard Schwehm (21 January 2004) accessed 7 March 2007
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