I'm surprised that this has not been mentioned here:
http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2015/07/15/claudia-alexander-1959-2015
--Bill
People have been focused on the NH flyby.
The picture on the Rosetta site of her is misleading, it looks nothing like what she did when she gave a Rosetta presentation.
May she rest in peace.
I saw the Rosetta mission documentary on National Geographic the other day, I saw her in that documentary serveral times. A couple of days before that I read on Emily Lakdawalla's twitter feed that she had passed away.
Rest in peace.
And Rosetta tributes to departed colleagues:
http://blogs.esa.int/rosetta/2015/09/28/rosetta-science-working-team-dedication-to-deceased-colleagues/
--Bill
It is an interesting fact that it was a movie that inspired her to come to this field. In a NASA interview, she said the film Fantasia ignited her passion for other worlds at a very young age.
She said the movie “opened an imaginative pathway of wonder for me about worlds other than Earth — primitive worlds — and how huge geologic forces can impact life forms there.”
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