Elvia
H. Thompson
Headquarters, Washington Sept. 19, 2005
(Phone: 202/358-1696)
Alan Brown
Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
(Phone: 661/276-2665)
RELEASE: 05-272
NASA DRYDEN CHIEF ENGINEER MARTA BOHN-MEYER DIES IN AIRPLANE CRASH
The crash of an aerobatic plane in Oklahoma has claimed the life of
Marta Bohn-Meyer. Bohn-Meyer was chief engineer at NASA's Dryden Flight
Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif., and a widely known
precision aerobatic pilot.
Bohn-Meyer, 48, died Sunday morning when the Giles G-300 she was flying
crashed as she was beginning an aerobatic practice routine near the C.E.
Page Airport in Yukon, Okla. Yukon is a suburb of Oklahoma City.
The crash is being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration.
In a message to Dryden staff this morning, center
director Kevin Petersen said he was "deeply saddened" upon
hearing of Bohn-Meyer's tragic death.
"Marta Bohn-Meyer was an extraordinarily talented individual and
a most trusted technical expert and manager at NASA Dryden," Petersen
said. "She committed her life and career to aviation and the advancement
of aeronautics and space in the United States. We at Dryden will miss
her tremendously. All the hearts and prayers of NASA Dryden go out to
her husband Bob and Marta's family," he added.
Bohn-Meyer had been employed as an aeronautical research and operations
engineer at Dryden since 1979 following her graduation from Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N.Y., with a bachelor's degree in aeronautical
engineering. She was appointed chief engineer at Dryden in October 2001
after serving in a series of increasingly responsible positions. These
included director of flight operations, director of safety and mission
assurance, deputy director of flight operations, deputy director of aerospace
projects and project manager for the F-16 XL Supersonic Laminar Flow
Control project.
From 1976 to 1979 she was a student in a cooperative education program
at NASA's Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. There she participated
in rotorcraft research, and wind tunnel and flight safety projects associated
with small civil aircraft.
During her career at Dryden, Bohn-Meyer worked on a variety of research
projects, specializing in flight test operations, developing test techniques,
and laminar flow research. Among these projects were flight tests of
space shuttle thermal protection tiles with a NASA F-104, B-57 gust gradient
evaluations, and the F-14 aileron-rudder interconnect and variable sweep
transition laminar-flow programs, in addition to her work on the F-16XL
laminar flow project before becoming project manager.
Bohn-Meyer was the author of several publications and reports on sailplane
performance, laminar flow experiments and composite construction.
Bohn-Meyer was one of two flight engineers assigned to fly in the SR-71
high-speed flight research program at Dryden. She was the first female
crewmember from NASA or the Air Force -- and the second woman -- to fly
in one of the triple-sonic SR-71s. NASA used the SR-71s to obtain high
speed, high altitude data that can be applied to improve the designs
of future civil and military aircraft.
Bohn-Meyer was an FAA-certified flight instructor and listed competitive
aerobatic flying, aircraft building, and classic car restoration among
her hobbies.
Among other honors, in 1996 she received the NASA
Exceptional Service Medal "for exceptional service in flight operations and project
management in support of several national flight research programs." She
was also awarded the Aerospace Educator Award in 1998 from Women in Aerospace
and in 1992 received the Arthur C. Fleming Award in the Scientific Category.
A frequent participant in education programs, particularly for girls,
she was a role model for young women interested in entering into technical
fields.
For more information about NASA on the Internet, visit:
www.nasa.gov/home
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