Thursday, January 17, 2008
Writer: Shanna Relford
news@utsi.edu
At the start of the new year, as we plan for the next 12 months,
we also reflect on the past year’s events and accomplishments. The
University of Tennessee Space Institute continued to grow in 2007,
increasing in student enrollment and adding to the faculty. UTSI’s
faculty consists of some of the world’s most brilliant minds in the
fields of science, engineering and technology, and, as leaders in
their various fields, the five new faculty members that joined the
UTSI family in 2007 will only add to that reputation.
Joining the UTSI faculty most recently, as a Research Associate
Professor of Aviation Systems, Mr. John Muratore arrived in December
after spending 24 years with NASA, working at the Lyndon B. Johnson
Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas. Muratore held many interesting
positions at NASA, including Mission Control Center Chief at JSC,
responsible for leading the development of the new Mission Control
Center, and Space Shuttle Flight Director. “As Flight Director, I
was responsible for planning and conduct of Space Shuttle missions
from liftoff to landing,” said Muratore.
Muratore led the X-38 Crew Return Vehicle Project from inception to
the end of the project. “The X-38 was a prototype vehicle intended
to act as an ambulance or lifeboat for the space station,” said
Muratore. “Four of these vehicles were built and flown in the
atmosphere.” While serving as project manager for the X-38, he was
also mission director in the control room, a launch panel operator
aboard the B-52 drop aircraft and a flight test engineer on many
other test flights.

Muratore added, “Following loss of the shuttle Columbia, I was
transferred to the Shuttle program as Chief of Space Shuttle
Systems Engineering and Integration for the Return To Flight Effort.
I led activities to modify the shuttle system so that it was ready
to resume flight operations.”
Muratore will be leading research efforts at UTSI, working to
develop an airborne environmental research aircraft for UTSI, which,
he said, “will be used to sample and remotely sense the environment
in order to understand natural changes and the effect of human
activities on the natural environment.” “I’ll also be working to
integrate simulation and improved instrumentation and data
processing technologies into Aviation Systems’ existing flight test
courses and aircraft at UTSI,” said Muratore.
A registered professional engineer in Texas, Muratore received a
Senior Executive Service Presidential rank in 2006. He has also
received the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, the NASA Exceptional
Achievement Medal and the NASA Exceptional Service Medal. In
addition, Muratore is a senior member of the Society of Flight Test
Engineers.
Muratore now resides in Huntsville, Alabama. He and his son, Daniel,
13, enjoy geo-caching, a game involving finding small hidden caches,
or “treasures,” at various locations using a GPS. He also has a
daughter, Alison, 25, who resides in Gaithersburg, Maryland.
Muratore is a gliding enthusiast as well as an avid skier and
sailor.
Dr. Jacqueline Johnson joined the UTSI team in November as an
Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering. Dr.
Johnson comes to us from Argonne National Laboratory in Argonne,
Illinois where she was performing important research on the
structure of amorphous materials, specifically glass ceramics for
medical imaging devices and diamond-like carbon as a coating on
medical prosthetics.

Dr. Johnson was recently honored with an R&D 100 award for
developing a new mammography system based on glass-ceramic plate.
She is continuing her mammography research here at UTSI.
Dr. Johnson now resides in Tullahoma. Dr. Johnson and her husband,
Charles, a physicist who will also be joining UTSI, have four
children: Lisa, 23, who has a bachelor’s degree in biology and is
now applying for medical school; Will, 21, a professional soccer
player in the Netherlands, who represents Canada internationally,
(he was born in Canada); Ben, 19, who is at Western Illinois
University studying business; and Zoë, 15, who attends Tullahoma
High School.
Dr. Johnson enjoys cycling and is a dedicated member of a search and
rescue team, along with her seven-year-old German Shepherd, Largo.
She and Largo attend weekly search and rescue training, and are a
great benefit to the local community. Dr. Johnson has another
seven-year-old German Shepherd who is a qualified therapy dog.
UTSI added two new professors in August, Dr. Denise Jackson,
Associate Professor of Industrial Engineering and Engineering
Management, and Dr. Thad Morton, Research Assistant Professor of
Mechanical, Aerospace, and Biomedical Engineering.
Dr.
Jackson had been a faculty member of UT Knoxville’s Department of
Industrial Engineering since 1984 and has previous experience as an
Industrial Engineer at Union Carbide Corporation in Oak Ridge. At
UTK, Dr. Jackson served as the chair of the Graduate Committee from
1999 to 2005. During that time she interacted with the UTSI faculty
in engineering management in making decisions concerning acceptance
of applicants, in serving on capstone project committees, and in
teaching distance courses. Thus, joining the UTSI faculty was an
almost seamless transition.
Dr. Jackson is currently teaching distance education courses for
UTSI in Productivity and Quality Engineering, Quantitative
Approaches in Engineering Management, Knowledge Management, and
Change Management at UTSI’s Oak Ridge facility. She is also focusing
her research efforts on the management of knowledge as a key
organizational asset. This is an extension of her earlier work with
information systems. According to Jackson, “information provides
answers to "who", "what", "where", and "when" questions in an
organization; knowledge, however, answers "how" questions - the
questions dearest to an engineer.”
At UT Knoxville, Dr. Jackson conducted and published research on
performance measurement, information systems, and systems analysis
and design as well as teaching a wide variety of industrial
engineering classes. Dr. Jackson is a licensed professional engineer
in the state of Tennessee and has been certified as a Six Sigma
Green Belt by the American Society of Quality.
Dr. Jackson resides in Knoxville with her husband Andrew and their
youngest son, Chris. Their oldest son, Zack, is a freshman at
Washington University in St. Louis. Dr. Jackson spends her Friday
nights in the fall rooting for Bearden High School’s football team,
where Chris is a freshman.

Dr. Thad Morton worked as a gas turbine design engineer at General
Electric and Rolls-Royce before joining UTSI. He brings expertise in
the areas of bluff-body aerodynamics, mathematical methods for
rotational flows, fluid friction, heat transfer, turbine blade
design, and turbine cycle analysis and simulation.
Dr. Morton has conducted and published research on vortex-dominated
fluid flows, and his experience, skills and research fit in very
well with UTSI’s research initiative. He is eagerly looking forward
to teaching related courses at UTSI.
Lastly, Dr. Zhongren Yue is beginning his second year with UTSI as a
Research Associate Professor of Materials Science and Engineering
after joining the Institute in January of 2007. Dr. Yue previously
worked as a research scientist with the Department of Materials
Science & Engineering at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign (UIUC)
At UIUC, Dr. Yue conducted research on advanced materials including
activated carbon fibers for water and air purifications. He played a
critical role in a DARPA project by designing a filter system to
remove a wide range of impurities specified by DARPA to well below
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s maximum contaminant level
values. He had also made outstanding contributions to the Center of
Advanced Materials for Purification of Water with Systems (CAMPWS)
at UIUC funded by the National Science Foundation.
At
UTSI, he is continuing his carbon fiber research with Professor
Ahmad Vakili, focusing on the fabrication of low-cost carbon fibers,
fiber surface modifications, fiber-reinforced composites used as
advanced lightweight construction materials, and high surface area
activated carbon fibers used as advanced environmental remediation
materials.
Dr. Yue is also teaching courses on Fiber Science, Fundamental
Principles of Composite Materials and Polymer Science and
Engineering at UTSI. Dr. Yue resides in Tullahoma with his wife,
Ling (Linda) and their 16-year-old son Wenqiang (William), who is a
junior at Tullahoma High School. When he isn’t working, he loves to
fish and spend time enjoying Middle Tennessee’s beautiful lakes,
woods, rivers and streams.