News Release

SwRI's Alan Stern awarded 2018 Lowell Thomas Award in Engineering Exploration

Award recognizes the scientific exploration of land, sea, air and space

Grant and Award Announcement

Southwest Research Institute

SAN ANTONIO -- Sept. 24, 2018 -- The Explorers Club has selected Dr. Alan Stern to receive the 2018 Lowell Thomas Award in Engineering Exploration. Stern, associate vice president of the Space Science and Engineering Division at Southwest Research Institute, serves as principal investigator of NASA's New Horizons mission, which made headlines worldwide when the spacecraft made the first exploration of the Pluto system and set a record for the most distant worlds ever explored at more than 3 billion miles from the Sun. The spacecraft is now set to break that record on January 1, 2019, when it explores Kuiper Belt object 2014 MU69, nicknamed Ultima Thule -- a billion miles past Pluto.

Past recipients of the award include such pioneers as Isaac Asimov, Sir Edmund Hillary, astronaut Mae Jemison, Sir David Attenborough and Lowell Thomas himself.

"It's humbling to be named for this award alongside the likes of Buzz Aldrin, Chuck Yaeger and other accomplished explorers," said Stern. "It has been my honor to lead the exploration of Pluto and the Kuiper Belt for NASA, but every member of the New Horizons team shares that pride and I dedicate this award to the entire team."

Stern is perhaps best known for the Pluto flyby, which culminated July 14, 2015, when New Horizons came to within 8,500 miles of the planet. Onboard instruments collected historic images and other science measurements, revolutionizing knowledge of Pluto and its moons. The spacecraft is now flying through the Kuiper Belt, an area of icy objects at the far reaches of the solar system, and rapidly nearing Ultima Thule, which it will encounter on New Year's Day.

The Lowell Thomas Award in Engineering Exploration, bestowed by The Explorer's Club, celebrates people who have engineered groundbreaking expeditions and expeditionary science. Stern will receive the award October 27 at the Museum of Science in Boston. Since its inception in 1904, The Explorers Club has promoted the scientific exploration of land, sea, air and space by supporting research and education in the physical, natural and biological sciences.

Stern has been honored numerous times over the course of his career. This year, he received the National Award of Nuclear Science & History from the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History. In 2016 and 2007, TIME Magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people of the year. In 2016, he received the Carl Sagan Memorial Award from the American Astronomical Society and the NASA Distinguished Public Service Medal, the space agency's highest civilian honor.

He is a long-time advocate of suborbital, orbital and planetary space commercialization. In 2007 and 2008, he led NASA's Science Mission Directorate, overseeing 93 flight missions and more than 3,000 grants. His expertise ranges from research studies of the Kuiper Belt and Oort cloud, comets and planetary satellites to space instrument development, particularly in ultraviolet technologies. Stern leads SwRI's commercial suborbital program and expects to fly in space on SwRI suborbital research missions in the coming years.

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For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/industries/mission-development-operations.


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