Lyon Bradley King | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Education | University of Michigan |
Engineering career | |
Discipline | Space Propulsion Plasma Physics Optical Fluid Diagnostics |
Institutions | Michigan Technological University |
Awards | Richard and Elizabeth Henes Professor of Space Systems Engineering |
L. Brad King is an American engineer. He is the CEO and co-founder of Orbion Space Technologies, [1] an aerospace company based in Houghton, MI, specializing in Hall-effect thrusters. [2] He is also the CEO of Aerophysics Inc, a company based in Allouez, MI, providing "intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance" to the government. [3] He is a Richard and Elizabeth Henes Endowed Professor for Space Systems in Mechanical Engineering-Engineering Mechanics at Michigan Technological University. [4]
A 1989 graduate of Calumet High School, King holds a Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Michigan, and has served on numerous NASA, Department of Defense, and Intelligence Community advisory panels, and has published more than 100 papers on space propulsion systems. King is a 2003 recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award [5] from President George W. Bush and selected as a recipient of the Society of Automotive Engineers Ralph R. Teetor Award [6] for engineering educators in 2006.
King is a researcher investigating the field of "electric space propulsion systems, including Hall-effect thrusters, ion engines, and arcjets." [7] King's research experience in the broader field of plasma physics includes such subjects as the design of the in-situ electrostatic probes, ion-energy analysis and time-of-flight mass spectrometry, Doppler laser cooling of trapped ions, optical flow diagnostics, and antimatter confinement. He holds patents for generating electrospray from a ferrofluid, self-regenerating nanotips for low-power electric propulsion cathodes, and a method and apparatus for improving efficiency of a Hall-effect thruster. [8]
Lyon Bradley King | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Education | University of Michigan |
Engineering career | |
Discipline | Space Propulsion Plasma Physics Optical Fluid Diagnostics |
Institutions | Michigan Technological University |
Awards | Richard and Elizabeth Henes Professor of Space Systems Engineering |
L. Brad King is an American engineer. He is the CEO and co-founder of Orbion Space Technologies, [1] an aerospace company based in Houghton, MI, specializing in Hall-effect thrusters. [2] He is also the CEO of Aerophysics Inc, a company based in Allouez, MI, providing "intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance" to the government. [3] He is a Richard and Elizabeth Henes Endowed Professor for Space Systems in Mechanical Engineering-Engineering Mechanics at Michigan Technological University. [4]
A 1989 graduate of Calumet High School, King holds a Ph.D. in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Michigan, and has served on numerous NASA, Department of Defense, and Intelligence Community advisory panels, and has published more than 100 papers on space propulsion systems. King is a 2003 recipient of the Presidential Early Career Award [5] from President George W. Bush and selected as a recipient of the Society of Automotive Engineers Ralph R. Teetor Award [6] for engineering educators in 2006.
King is a researcher investigating the field of "electric space propulsion systems, including Hall-effect thrusters, ion engines, and arcjets." [7] King's research experience in the broader field of plasma physics includes such subjects as the design of the in-situ electrostatic probes, ion-energy analysis and time-of-flight mass spectrometry, Doppler laser cooling of trapped ions, optical flow diagnostics, and antimatter confinement. He holds patents for generating electrospray from a ferrofluid, self-regenerating nanotips for low-power electric propulsion cathodes, and a method and apparatus for improving efficiency of a Hall-effect thruster. [8]