NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Richard Hofer has a diverse work experience in the field of electric propulsion. Richard started working at the Plasmadynamics and Electric Propulsion Laboratory at the University of Michigan as a Graduate Student Researcher from September 1998 to January 2004. During this time, they focused on the development and characterization of high-efficiency, high-specific impulse xenon Hall thrusters.
In August 2000, Richard joined the NASA Glenn Research Center as a Research Engineer in Electric Propulsion. Richard worked as a NASA support service contractor and was responsible for designing, fabricating, and testing several xenon and krypton Hall thrusters of different power ranges. Richard also developed a suite of plasma diagnostics for electric thruster plumes.
Richard's career at NASA continued as they transitioned to the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in April 2005 as an Electric Propulsion Technologist V. Richard later became the Group Technical Lead for Electric Propulsion in December 2015, supervising the team in this field. Richard'smost recent role at NASA JPL is the Supervisor of Electric Propulsion, a position they have held since April 2017. As of August 2020, Richard is currently serving as the Principal Engineer in Electric Propulsion at NASA JPL.
Richard Hofer earned a Bachelor of Science in Aerospace Engineering, with a major in Mechanical Engineering, from the University of Michigan in 1998. Richard then pursued a Master of Science in Aerospace Engineering at the same institution, completing it in 2000. Continuing their education, Richard went on to earn a PhD in Aerospace Engineering from the University of Michigan in 2004.
This person is not in the org chart
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
10 followers
Formed in 1936, the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory is a federally funded research and development center managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology (Caltech.) JPL joined NASA as an FFRDC when the agency was founded in 1958. JPL helped open the Space Age by developing America's first Earth-orbiting science satellite, creating the first successful interplanetary spacecraft, and sending robotic missions to the solar system. Today, JPL continues its world-leading innovation, implementing programs in planetary exploration, Earth science, space-based astronomy and technology development while applying its capabilities to technical and scientific problems of national significance. We have big aspirations, driven by our values. We aim to be: Bold, Inclusive, Trusted. We turn ideas for science investigation into the reality of groundbreaking space missions, partnering with our strategic business teams to guide JPL into the future. We Dare Mighty Things Together.