MEMORIAL RESOLUTION                                            SenD#4678
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DEAN R. CHAPMAN
(1922-1995)

Dean R. Chapman, Professor Emeritus of the Department of Aeronautics and 
Astronautics and the Department of Mechanical Engineering died at his 
home in Saratoga, California, on October 4, 1995.  His distinguished 
engineering career spanned more than fifty years, both in government 
service at the National Aeronautics and Astronautics Administration 
(NASA) Ames Research Center and Stanford University.  He was 
internationally recognized for his pioneering research in fluid 
dynamics, the solution of the mystery concerning the origin of tektites, 
aerodynamically shaped glassy objects found scattered over the earth's 
surface, and as the architect for the development of modern 
computational fluid dynamics.

Dean was born in Fort Sumner, New Mexico, on March 8, 1922, one of three 
children.  The family moved to Arizona for a short time and finally to 
Southern California in 1926, Dean was very close to his brother Tom, and 
older sister, Carmen, as they grew up.  Dean and Tom did almost 
everything together, from play to work, This included selling magazines 
door-to-door and delivering newspapers, The newspaper route meant 
getting up at 3:30 a.m. each morning to deliver them before going to 
school.  Dean and Tom also loved to play basketball.  The many hours 
devoted to basketball and selling newspapers may have contributed to 
Dean's average grades in high school.  After high school Dean and two of 
his friends made plans to enlist in the Army Air Corps; however, there 
was a requirement of some college credits to qualify for preflight 
training, so it was off to Los Angeles City College (LACC) for Dean and 
his friends, Don and George.  Don and George both completed their 
college requirements and enlisted in the Air Corps.  Dean, however, was 
encouraged by a professor at LACC to take the entrance examination to 
the California Institute of Technology (Caltech).  This professor was 
impressed with Dean's keen mind and intellect and was convinced that 
Dean would reach higher goals with an education at Caltech than with 
service in the Air Corps.  Dean agreed, took the entrance exam, and was 
accepted with a scholarship.  Dean graduated from LACC in 1941 with the 
highest scholastic honors in the class.  At Caltech he distinguished 
himself academically and was also the star of their basketball team.  He 
obtained a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering (highest scholastic 
average in class) and an M.S. degree in aeronautical engineering 
(outstanding student award for class).

Upon graduation Dean accepted a position at the National Advisory 
Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) Ames Research Center.  World War II was 
still being fought and there was some concern about essential personnel 
being lost to the draft; there was also some concern about essential 
security at the laboratory since the lab was located on United States 
property (Moffett Field).  The government decided to draft all Ames 
personnel into the Navy, thereby solving the aforementioned problems.  
So, Dean became an ensign in the Navy.  The draft created some strange 
inequities; some of the supervisors couldn't pass the physical exam and 
were given only the rank of chief, which created situations in which 
supervisors were outranked by subordinates.  After the war Dean went 
back to Caltech and obtained his Ph.D. degree in Aeronautics in 1948.

As a scientist Dean had some unusual qualities that would have an impact 
on his future performance.  In addition to being an outstanding 
engineer, he was also an outstanding mathematician-- an unusual 
combination of talents.  He also had a knack for simplifying a problem 
and reporting it with great clarity in the literature.

Dean started his career at Ames working in the 4Ox8O-foot wind tunnel, 
which was, at that time, the largest wind tunnel in the world; however, 
he soon transferred to the lx3-foot supersonic wind tunnel where he 
spent a good portion of his career.  Much of Dean's early research, 
centered on skin friction, base pressure, and heat transfer.  For this 
work he received the Lawrence Sperry Award in 1952, one of the 
outstanding honors in aeronautics given annually by the Institute of 
Aeronautical Sciences.  He also pioneered the use of gas mixtures for 
use in wind tunnels at high Mach numbers to avoid the problems of gas 
liquefaction.  Dean did a considerable amount of theoretical and 
experimental research on the character of separated flows and their 
effects on the heat transfer in these regions.

In 1957 the Soviet Union launched its first sputnik, signaling the 
beginning of the space age.  In 1958 NACA was renamed the National 
Aeronautics and Space Administration.  Ames Aeronautical Laboratory was 
renamed Ames Research Center.  Dean's career at Ames spanned the years 
from 1944 through 1979.  During this period he was to become one of the 
world's leading authorities on such subjects as skin friction, boundary 
layers, base pressure, separated flows, turbulence, use of gas mixtures 
in wind tunnels, arc-jet development, entry aerodynamics, ablation 
analysis, thermal protection, hypersonic real gas flows, computational 
aerodynamics, shock wave analysis, and tektites.

The research project that challenged Dean the most was his work on the 
origin of tektites.  Tektites are unusually shaped glassy objects 
scattered over the earth's surface at various locations.  They have been 
studied by scientists of various disciplines for more than a hundred 
years, and various theories have surfaced regarding their origin.  Dean 
first learned of tektites when he visited the British Museum in the 
early 1960S where he recognized features of tektites suggesting they had 
been shaped by the heat and aerodynamic forces of entry into the earth's 
atmosphere.  Using a device called an arc-jet, which simulated 
atmosphere-entry conditions, Dean successfully produced tektite shapes.  
By analyzing the ablation characteristics of Australian tektites, he was 
able to determine their entry velocities and entry angles, thus 
concluding that the most probable source of tektite origin was the moon.

H. Julian Allen, then director of Ames Research Center, congratulated 
Dean on this bit of scientific "sleuthing," but added, "If you are any 
good as an aerodynamicist, you should be able to determine from which 
crater the tektites came." Dean accepted the challenge.  He performed 
specific gravity measurements on thousands of tektites and, by drawing 
on the results of extensive chemical analysis, was able to determine the 
landing patterns that the tektites traced on the surface of the earth.  
Using high-speed computers, he analyzed the earth-moon trajectories of 
all the large craters on the moon that could conceivably produce 
tektites.  He was able to show that the crater Tycho produced landing 
patterns that matched those observed on earth.  In answering Allen's 
challenge, he was able to determine not only which of the moon's craters 
produced the tektites but also the particular ray of that crater (the 
Rosse ray).  By 1965 Dean's detective work had become one of the most 
fascinating displays of scientific virtuosity in the annals of the Ames 
Research Center.

Although Dean concluded that the tektites were formed by the impact of a 
large iron-nickel meteorite on the surface of the moon, these 
conclusions are not universally accepted by many scientists whose 
disciplines do not include atmosphere-entry aerodynamics.  Dean also 
amassed a large collection of tektites from various parts of the world.  
This collection, together with the results of his many experiments, now 
resides in the Smithsonian Institution.

In 1963 at a ceremony in which Vice President Lyndon B.  Johnson was the 
principal speaker, Dean was presented with NASA's highest scientific 
award, its Award for Exceptional Scientific Achievement.  He was the 
first person at Ames to receive this award.

During his career at Ames, Dean received numerous awards and other 
honors.  He received the Rockefeller Public Service Award for his 
outstanding work on spacecraft reentry trajectories.  This furnished him 
the opportunity to pursue research at the university of his choice 
(University of Manchester in England).  For his research on tektites, 
Dean received the H. Julian Allen Award from NASA Ames Research Center 
in 1972.  He was awarded the Dryden Lectureship in Research by the 
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics in 1979 and received 
NASA's Distinguished Service Medal in 1980.  He was named Hunsaker 
Honorary Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology from 
1978 to 1979.  He was a fellow of both the American Astronautical 
Society and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.

In 1969 Dean began a distinguished career as an administrator when he 
was appointed chief of the Thermo and Gas Dynamics Division at Ames.  In 
1974 he became the center's Director of Astronautics.  In that capacity 
he headed the center's work in fundamental and applied research in 
broadly defined areas of fluid mechanics, gas dynamics, materials, 
computer technology, and chemistry.  More than five hundred people were 
employed in his directorate.  Probably his most important contribution 
during these years was the establishment of the first significant 
research group to develop computational fluid dynamics using the best 
available high-speed computers.  The first massively parallel computer, 
the Illiac IV, was installed at Ames in 1970 and, under Dean's 
leadership, became, operational in 1973.  Dean's work was recognized in 
1975 by his election to the National Academy of Engineering.

In 1980 Dean retired from Ames after more than thirty four years of 
service and joined the faculty at Stanford University as a research 
professor of aeronautics and astronautics and mechanical engineering.  
Here he returned to his first professional love - research, continuing 
to work in the computational study of turbulence and hypersonic flow.  
He was instrumental in forming the Center for Turbulence Research.  He 
supervised numerous students al)a was valued highly by his students and 
colleagues at Stanford. His keen intellect pulled many a student's 
doctoral research study from the brink of nowhere by his making a key 
observation, which then became the focus of the redirected thesis.  He 
was an outstanding teacher, mentor, and friend.

Dean is survived by his wife, Marguerite; son, Donald Chapman, of Santa 
Monica, California; daughter, Anita Hirsch, M.D., and three 
grandchildren, Rebecca, Sarah and David Fingerhood, all of Belfast 
Valley, Maryland.  He is also survived by hi brother, Tom Chapman, of 
Murrieta, California, and his sister, Carmen Benson, of Downey, 
California.

An inspiring leader of scientific research and a good friend, Dean 
Chapman will be greatly missed by all who knew him.

George S. Springer, Chair
Robert T. Jones
Hans Mark
Robert W. MacCormack