PICKERING, WILLIAM HAYWARD


Meaning of PICKERING, WILLIAM HAYWARD in English

born , Dec. 24, 1910, Wellington, N.Z. U.S. engineer, physicist, and head of the team that developed Explorer 1, the first U.S. satellite. He studied at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena (B.S. 1932, M.S. 1933, Ph.D. 1936), and joined the staff of the Institute in 1936. Working under the U.S. physicist Robert A. Millikan, Pickering developed cosmic-radiation-detection gear for high-altitude balloon flights. In 1944 he became a section chief of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where he developed the first telemetry system used in U.S. rockets. He was manager of the Corporal rocket project, which brought about important early advances in guidance and communication techniques. In 1951 Pickering became chief of the division of guided-missile electronics and three years later was appointed director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He was in charge of the development of the Explorer 1 satellite and the modification of the Jupiter C launch vehicle. Among other important projects of the laboratory were the Ranger and Surveyor spacecraft for unmanned flights to the Moon, the Mariner spacecraft for survey flights to Venus and Mars, and numerous other unmanned probes into the solar system. Pickering retired from the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in 1976 and served for two years as director of the research institute of the University of Petroleum and Minerals in Saudi Arabia. He then returned to Pasadena to establish a private consulting practice.

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