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SLR-Mail No.1000

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Date:2002-11-28 10:08:00
Sender:John Degnan (John.J.Degnan@nasa.gov) <EDC slrmail account <slrmail@dgfi.badw.de>>
Subject:[SLR-Mail] No. 1000: My Retirement from NASA
Author:John Degnan
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SLR Electronic Mail 2002-11-28 10:08:00 UTC Message No. 1000
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Author: John Degnan (John.J.Degnan@nasa.gov)
Subject: My Retirement from NASA

[ Part 1, Text/PLAIN 72 lines. ]
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To my friends and colleagues in the space geodetic community:

I am writing to inform you that I will retire from NASA on January 3,
2003. I filed the official paperwork yesterday.

I first came to the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) as a college
freshman and student trainee in 1964 and had the great pleasure of being
a junior member of the team that recorded the first laser echoes from an
artificial satellite using the original Goddard Laser (GODLAS) system. I
have been involved with the development of advanced Satellite Laser
Ranging systems ever since beginning with the Goddard Standard Laser
(STALAS) in 1975, the MOBLAS and TLRS upgrades to cm quality in the
1980´s, the move to increased automation in the early 1990´s, and most
recently the totally automated photon-counting SLR2000 system which has
begun field trials.

I came to know many of you in the international space geodetic community
when I took the position of Deputy Manager and Chief Engineer for NASA´s
Crustal Dynamics Project under John Bosworth in 1989. I have been
involved with the NASA SLR and VLBI networks since that time. In
anticipation of my retirement, I resigned from my position as Chairperson
of the ILRS Governing Board in early October at the 13th International
Workshop for Laser Ranging in Washington DC. I am pleased to report that
Dr. Werner Gurtner of the University of Berne in Switzerland was selected
by the new ILRS Governing Board as it´s chairperson. Werner has been an
extremely active member of the ILRS GB since its inception in 1998 and is
well known to the GPS community as well. I leave the ILRS chairmanship in
excellent hands.

One of the great pleasures of my professional career was to observe how
the scientific community utilized the technological advances in the SLR
hardware to make new and exciting measurements in the areas of gravity
field, plate tectonics, Earth Orientation Parameters, oceanography, lunar
physics, general relativity, etc. I wish to take this opportunity to
commend and thank the space geodetic community for its resourcefulness
and creativity in formulating and solving new scientific problems which
in turn gave my own professional efforts relevance and meaning.

I plan to stay in the Washington DC area and continue to work in the
science and engineering arena but in a university or corporate
environment. I am currently considering several employment options and
have not yet made a final decision. However, I do hope to continue my
association with the Laboratory for Terrestrial Physics and its programs
in some capacity.

I see exciting times ahead for geodesy. The SLR2000 technology has
recently been applied successfully to an airborne photon counting imaging
lidar, and globally contiguous high resolution mapping of moons and
planets by low power lasers now seems feasible. I also look forward to
the day when compact laser transponders will measure interplanetary
distances to centimeters and transfer time between the planets with
subcentimeter accuracy. (see the Journal of Geodynamics, November 2002)

I look forward to seeing some of you at the AGU Fall Meeting in San
Francisco next week and hopefully at future meetings. I wish you all
continued success in your scientific and engineering endeavors.

Sincerely,

John

Dr. John J. Degnan
Head, Geoscience Technology Office
Mail Code 920.3
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, MD 20771 USA
Phone: 01-301-614-5860
FAX: 01-301-614-5970
E-mail: John.J.Degnan@nasa.gov

Thought for the Day: A society grows great when old men plant trees
whose shade they know they shall never sit in - Greek proverb





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