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Future Insight Seminar: From flying on the last Space Shuttle to Artemis: What is the future of the U.S. Space Program? - Nov. 30

Sandy Magnus

Sandy Magnus
Principal at AstroPlanetview & Retired Astronaut
Wednesday, Nov. 30 | 4:00 P.M. | Zoom Webinar

Please join Mark Sirangelo as he welcomes Dr. Sandy Magnus for a wide-ranging discussion taking us from the beginnings of her NASA career to her flight on the last Space Shuttle mission. We will also discuss the Artemis program, ISS and the future of the Space Industry.

Dr. Sandra H. “Sandy” Magnus, is the Principal at AstroPlanetview, LLC and a part time Professor of the Practice at the Georgia Institute of Technology. Prior to joining Georgia Tech, she was the Deputy Director of Engineering in the Office of the Secretary of Defense Research and Engineering. She also served as the Executive Director of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA), the world’s largest technical society dedicated to the global aerospace profession for five and a half years.

Selected to the NASA Astronaut Corps in April, 1996, Dr. Magnus flew in space on the STS-112 shuttle mission in 2002, and on the final shuttle flight, STS-135, in 2011. In addition, she flew to the International Space Station on STS-126 in November 2008, served as flight engineer and science officer on Expedition 18, and returned home on STS-119 after four and a half months on board. Following her assignment on Station, she served at NASA Headquarters in the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. Her last duty at NASA, after STS-135, was as the deputy chief of the Astronaut Office.

Before joining NASA, Dr. Magnus worked for McDonnell Douglas Aircraft Company from 1986 to 1991, as a stealth engineer. While at McDonnell Douglas, she worked on internal research and development and on the Navy’s A-12 Attack Aircraft program, studying the effectiveness of radar signature reduction techniques.

Dr. Sandra Magnus, a two-time graduate of Missouri University of Science and Technology earning degrees in physics and electrical engineering then went on to earn a PhD in materials science and engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology has also been elected into the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) amongst many other awards and recognitions.

Mark N. Sirangelo created and hosts the CU Future Insight Seminar Series as CU’s Entrepreneur-Scholar in Residence. He is the recent Chairman of the U.S. Department of Defense’s Defense Innovation Board and the DoD’s Space Advisory Committee. Previously he was Special Assistant to the NASA Administrator helping to develop NASA’s return to the Moon. Mark was the founding executive and head of Sierra Nevada Corporation’s Space Systems and has served as the Chief Innovation Officer of Colorado.