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For release June 19, 2006
Helped Get Space Shuttle Back in Flight
UTSI AVIATION SYSTEMS’
LEADER STEPHEN CORDA GIVEN NASA ‘EXCEPTIONAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
Dr. Stephen Corda, head of the
Aviation Systems program at The University of Tennessee
Space Institute, has received the NASA Exceptional
Achievement Medal for helping get the Space Shuttle back
in flight.
He received the NASA medal on June 6 during the 2006
NASA Agency Honor Awards ceremony at Edwards Air Force
Base in the Mojave desert of California. It was
presented by Rex Geveden, NASA’s associate
administrator, and Kevin Petersen, center director for
the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center.
This medal is awarded to both civilian government
employees of NASA and to military astronauts. It is
granted for a significant, specific accomplishment or
substantial improvement in operations, efficiency,
service, financial savings, science, or technology that
contributes to NASA’s mission.
Corda’s citation reads: “For exceptional leadership and
management of the F-15B Lifting Foam Trajectory Flight
Research Team, in support of the Shuttle return to
flight program.”
“Just as NASA has recognized Dr. Corda for his
exceptional achievement, we at The University of
Tennessee Space Institute also have welcomed him as an
exceptional recent addition to our faculty,” said Dr.
Donald C. Daniel, UT associate vice president and chief
operating officer of UTSI. “I am especially eager to
work with him as we continue to build the national
reputation of our Aviation Systems program.”
In the flight test, pieces of Space Shuttle external
tank insulating foam, similar to the foam pieces that
impacted the Shuttle Columbia, were ejected from a NASA
F-15 aircraft at speeds up to Mach 2. Data was collected
on the foam’s survivability, aerodynamics, and
trajectories.
“Very high speed digital photography – up to 2000
pictures per second – was used to capture the flight of
these foam pieces as they were ejected from the F-15,”
Corda said.
“This unique set of flight data was then used to help
verify models that predict the flight of the foam from
the shuttle’s external tank to possible impact points on
the shuttle orbiter.”
The flight test was a joint project of the NASA Johnson
Space Flight Center, the NASA Marshall Space Flight
Center, and the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center.
For civilians, this decoration is typically bestowed to
mid-level and senior NASA administrators who have
supervised at least four to five successful NASA
missions. Astronauts may be awarded the decoration after
two to three space flights. Due to the prestige of the
NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal, it is authorized as
a military decoration for display on active duty
military uniforms.
Corda assumed duties in March as Program Chair for
UTSI’s Aviation Systems and Flight Research Group,
succeeding Dr. Ralph D. Kimberlin, who retired. He began
his flight test career conducting research with the
Naval Air Test Center, Patuxent River, Md.
A former flight researcher for the NASA Dryden Flight
Research Center for more than 12 years, Corda flew as a
NASA flight test engineer in the F/A-18, T-38, and F-15
aircraft. During his time at the Edwards Air Force Base
facility, he served in various capacities including
propulsion research engineer, project chief engineer for
the SR-71 Blackbird and F-15B supersonic test bed, Chief
of the Propulsion and Performance Branch, and as a
project manager for the NASA F-15B.
An avid aerobatic pilot, Corda holds FAA certificates as
a commercial pilot, flight instructor, instrument
instructor, multi-engine, seaplane and glider pilot, and
airframe and power plant mechanic.
Corda left NASA in 2001 to become a master instructor in
the Performance Branch at the U.S. Air Force Test Pilot
School at Edwards. As a U.S. Air Force civilian flight
test engineer, he flew in the F-16, T-38, and C-12
aircraft. In 2003, he joined the faculty of the
Aerospace Engineering Department at the Naval Academy in
Annapolis, Md., before returning to NASA in 2004.
He first joined NASA in 1990 and for two years was a
member of the senior professional staff in the
Aeronautics Department of The Johns Hopkins University
Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md. While there,
Corda conducted research and testing in hypersonic
scramjet propulsion and hypersonic vehicle design.

Dr. Stephen Corda, center, holds the NASA
Exceptional Achievement Medal, which he received
June 6. It was presented by Rex Geveden, NASA
associate administrator, left, and Kevin Petersen,
Center director for NASA Dryden Flight Research
Center, right.
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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