Ellen Stofan
Ellen Stofan
Ellen Renee Stofanis the Chief Scientist of NASA and serves as principal advisor to NASA Administrator Charles Bolden on the agency’s science programs, planning and investments. Previously, she served as vice president of Proxemy Research in Laytonsville, Maryland, and as an honorary professor in the Earth sciences department at the University College London...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionScientist
Date of Birth24 February 1961
CountryUnited States of America
life scientists whether
To unambiguously settle the questions of whether there was life on Mars, it will take scientists down on the surface.
huge life whether
There's a huge question of whether you really need water for life.
capacity incredible public
The public has an incredible capacity for appreciating the wonder of our planet, our solar system, our universe.
people space
People see space as a place where you go and cooperate.
man surface
My key aim is to get man on the surface of Mars by the mid-2030s.
human next
It's part of the human character to want to know what's over the next hill, to want to know what's beyond.
biased issue life
I'm so biased to this issue of the origins of life and the limits of life.
I'm actually a NASA brat. My father was a rocket scientist. He started working at NASA before it was NASA in 1959.
expand humans multiple surface visit
As we visit Mars multiple times, we will build up infrastructure on the surface to expand the capabilities and reach of humans on Mars.
'The Martian' may be fiction, but at NASA, we are working to make it a reality.
budget community nasa priorities scientific within
We actually look to the scientific community to kind of come back to NASA and tell us what the priorities should be. And then at NASA, we try to look within our budget and say, 'What can we accommodate, and what are the most important things for the nation?'
atmosphere coming slowing
If you think of the Apollo capsule coming into Earth with a parachute, the Mars atmosphere is just so thin, you've got to find some way of slowing yourself down really rapidly.
affect changes chief earth job looking planets sort taking understand
As chief scientist, it's sort of my job to look at bridges between what we do and to see the connections. But when we try to understand how are planets around other stars habitable... to looking back at the Earth - how are the changes that are taking place, how are they going to affect humanity?
bodies life
We're going to understand that there is life on other bodies in the solar system.