RocketSTEM Issue #9 - October 2014 | Page 21

KOHLHASE: “Let’s see – Ranger, Mariners 2, 4, 6 and 7, Viking, Voyager, Cassini, and some of the recent Mars missions (Mars Exploration Rovers) – 10 missions or so. One of the Ranger missions might have been marginal.” RS: Have you played a role in the Equinox or Solstice Mission extensions to the Cassini programme since 2008? KOHLHASE: “No, I came off the programme soon after launch. I arranged it so that I could officially retire in May 1998.” RS: You didn’t really retire, though, did you? KOHLHASE: “I have continued to consult at JPL until about 6 months ago. My latest work in 2013 was continuing to support the Mars Sample Return Campaign, as special senior advisor, by completing a major risk assessment study for the three missions comprising the campaign. And I’m sure I’ll get another invitation soon to go in and give an opinion on something, so I’m not quite dead … just fading away slowly!” (Laughs) RS: Fifty-five years and still at the cutting edge of planetary exploration - that’s a wonderful career, Charley! In the Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility at the Kennedy Space Centre Kohlhase (left) and Cassini Programme Manager, Richard Spehalski, hold the DVD containing 616,400 digitized signatures of people from 81 countries which was sent to Saturn on board Cassini, seen behind them. Charley designed the disk with the flags of 28 nations and symbolic golden eagle wing feathers. Credit: NASA/JPL on. How much harder was it for you and your team to plan, given the greater complexity of the spacecraft? KOHLHASE: “It was more complicated because there were more interfaces between the instruments and the spacecraft. “However, no matter how complex it may be, there are four secrets to working in this job. You have to be well-educated - you have to understand the physics, the math, the engineering, and of course the astronomy. You also need to be able to simplify. If you have a problem you reduce it to the two or three elements which really matter, using first principles that you’ve learned over time. You must also have absolute integrity. Never hide a problem. Share it immediately with the team to solve it. And finally, you must have a sense of humour! You might have a terrible problem, but you don’t just wring your hands. It’s good to laugh about it to break the ice, then get on and solve it. “So – education, ability to simplify, integrity and humour – those are the four secrets to success.” RS: Talking of success, you have had a hand in many missions to the Moon and other planets during your time at JPL, and they’ve all been successful. That’s quite a record! KOHLHASE: “It is, but, you know, today the environment is what I really care about the most. There’s simply no greater problem. We should all be stewards of the Earth, not its destroyers.” RS: How can space exploration help us in this respect? KOHLHASE: “We have a lot of Earth-orbiting satellites tracking the loss of biodiversity, natural resources and climate changes, but I don’t see politicians using that data to make any difference, we don’t have anybody with the courage to use it. We are consuming natural resources at five times the rate at which the Earth can replace them.” RS: Are you optimistic about the future of our global environment? KOHLHASE: “As I get older, one of the few things that I can take some joy in is that I live in one of the last great eras for the Earth. For my grandchildren and their children, though, I think it’ll be a severely reduced Earth. I’m basically an optimistic person, but I think that we won’t act in time to save the Earth.” RS: Do you have any final advice for how each of us should live our lives? KOHLHASE: “Rise early and seize each day. Learn much and use this knowledge well. Spend time with those you love. Never abuse your pets. Use logic to fight the irrational, for it is everywhere. Defend the environment and its wildlife. Meld mind and heart for greatest creativity. Follow your dreams, and become all that you can be.” 19 www.RocketSTEM .org 19