Clayton P. Turner, associate administrator for Space
Technology Mission Directorate
Credit: NASA
Clayton P. Turner will serve as the associate administrator of the Space
Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) at the agency’s headquarters in Washington, NASA Administrator Bill
Nelson announced Monday. His appointment is effective immediately.
Turner has served as the acting
associate administrator of STMD since July. In this role, Turner will continue
to oversee executive leadership, strategic planning, and overall management of
all technology maturation and demonstration programs executed from the
directorate enabling critical space focused technologies that deliver today and
help create tomorrow.
“Under Turner’s skilled and steady
hand, the Space Technology Mission Directorate will continue to do what it does
best: help NASA push the boundaries of what’s possible and drive American
leadership in space,” said NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. “I look forward to
what STMD will achieve under Turner’s direction.”
As NASA embarks on the next era of
space exploration, STMD leverages partnerships to advance technologies and test
new capabilities helping the agency develop a sustainable presence on the Moon
and beyond. As associate administrator of STMD, Turner will plan, coordinate,
and evaluate the mission directorate’s full range of programs and activities,
including budget formulation and execution, as well as represent the programs
to officials within and outside the agency.
Previously, Turner served as NASA
Langley Research Center Director since September 2019 and has been with the
agency for more than 30 years. He has held several roles at NASA Langley,
including engineering director, associate center director, and deputy center
director. Throughout his NASA career, he has worked on many projects for the
agency, including: the Earth Science Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared
Pathfinder Satellite Observation Project; the materials technology development
Gas Permeable Polymer Materials Project; the Space Shuttle Program’s Return to
Flight work; the flight test of the Ares 1-X rocket; the flight test of the
Orion Launch Abort System; and the entry, descent, and landing segment of the
Mars Science Laboratory.
In recognition of his commitment to
the agency and engineering, Turner has received many prestigious awards, such
as the NASA Distinguished Service Medal, the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal,
the NASA Exceptional Engineering Achievement Medal. He is also an Associate
Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) and a
Board of Trustees member of his alma mater, Rochester Institute of Technology.
NASA Glenn Research Center Deputy
Director, Dawn Schaible, became acting Langley Center Director in July and will
continue to serve in this role. At NASA Langley, Schaible leads a skilled group
of more than 3,000 civil servant and contractor scientists, researchers,
engineers, and support staff, who work to advance aviation, expand
understanding of Earth’s atmosphere, and develop
technology for space exploration.
For more about Turner’s experience, visit his full biography online at: https://go.nasa.gov/48UmkmS
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