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DEAN R
.
C HAP MAN
1922-1995
BY ROBERT T. JONES AND HANS MARK
DEAN R. CHAPMAN professor at Stanford University and
former director of astronautics at the National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA) Ames Research Center,
died at his home in Saratoga, California, on October 4, 1995.
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 younger brother, Tom, and older sister,
Carmen, as they grew up. Dean and Tom did almost every-
thing together, from play to work. This included selling
magazines door-to-door and delivering newspapers. The news-
paper route meant getting up at 3:30 a.m. each morning to
deliver them before going to school. Dean en c! Tom also loved
to play basketball. The many hours clevoted to basketball and
selling newspapers may have contributed to Dean's average
gracles 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 en-
listed 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
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MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
was impressed with Dean's keen mind and intellect and was
convinced that Dean would reach higher goals with an educa-
tion at Caltech than with service in the Air Corps. Dean
agreed, took the entrance exam, and was accepted with a
scholarship. Dean gracluated from LACC in 1941 with the
highest scholastic honors in the class. At Caltech he distin-
guished himself academically en c! was also the star of their
basketball team. He obtained a B.S. degree in mechanical
engineering (highest scholastic average in classy and an M.S.
degree in aeronautical engineering (outstanding student
award for his classy.
Upon graduation Dean accepted a position at the National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA) Arrives Aeronau-
tical Laboratory, now the NASA Arnes 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 of Arnes people
into the Navy, thereby solving the aforementioned problems.
So, Dean became an ensign in the Navy.
This created some strange inequities; some of the
supervisors couIcin't pass the physical exam en cl 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 a very 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 Arnes working in the 40xS0-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
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DEAN R. CHAPMAN
43
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 clid a considerable amount of theoretical en c! experi-
mental 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. Arrives Aeronau-
tical Laboratory was renamed Ames Research Center.
Dean's career at Ames Research Center spanned the years
from 1944 through 1979. During this period he was to be-
come one of the worId's leacling authorities on such subjects
as skin friction, boundary layers, base pressure, separated
flows, turbulence, use of gas mixtures in wind tunnels, arcjet
clevelopment, entry aerodynamics, ablation analysis, thermal
protection, hypersonic real gas flows, computational aerody-
namics and fluid dynamics, shock wave analysis, and tektites.
The research project that challenged Dean the most was
his work on the origin of tektites. Tektites are strange 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 sur-
faced 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 crevice called an arcjet, which
simulated atmosphere-entry conclitions, Dean successfully
produced tektite shapes. By analyzing the ablation character-
istics of Australian tektites, he was able to determine their
entry velocities ant! entry angles, thus concluding that the
most probable source of tektite origin was the moon.
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MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
H. Julian Allen, then director of Arrives Research Center,
congratulated Dean on this bit of scientific "sleuthing," but
addecl, "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 anti, 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-speec! computers, he analyzed
the moon-earth trajectories of all the large craters on the
moon that could conceivably produce tektites. He was able to
show that the crater Tycho produced lancling patterns that
matcher! those observer! on the earth. In answering Allen's
challenge, he was able to determine not only which of the
moon's craters proclucec3 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 tektites were formed by the
impact of a large iron-nicke] meteorite on the surface of the
moon, these conclusions are not universally accepted by many
scientists whose disciplines do not inclucle atmosphere-entry
aerodynamics. Dean also amassed a large collection of tek-
tites 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 Lynclon B.
Johnson was the principal speaker, Dean was presented with
NASA's highest scientific award, its Award for Exceptional Sci-
entific Achievement. He was the first person at Ames to
receive this award.
During his career at Ames, Dean received numerous other
awards anct honors. He received the Rockefeller Public Service
Award for his outstanding work on spacecraft reentry
trajectories. This furnisher] 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 the NASA Ames
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DEAN R. CHAPMAN
45
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 Meclal in 1980. He was namecI Hunsaker
Honorary Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology from 1978 to 1979. He was a fellow of both the
American Astronautical Society en c! the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics.
In 1969 Chapman was appointed chief of the Thermo and
Gas Dynamics Division at Ames and thus began a ctistin-
guishec3 career as a research leader and administrator. In 1974
he became the center's director of astronautics. In that capac-
ity he header] the center's work in fundamental en c! applied
research in broadly clefinecl areas of fluid mechanics, gas cly-
namics, materials, computer technology, and chemistry. More
than five hundred people were employed in Chapman's di-
rectorate. Probably his most important contribution during
those years was the establishment of the first significant re-
search group to develop computational fluid dynamics using
the best available high-speed computers. The first massively
parallel computer, the [iliac IV, was installed at Ames in 1970
and, uncler Chapman's leadership, became operational in
~ 973. Chapman's work was recognized in ~ 975 by his election
to the National Academy of Engineering.
In 1980 Chapman retired from Ames after more than thirt,v-
four years of service and joined the faculty at Stanford
University as a research professor of aeronautics and
astronautics and mechanical engineering. He continued to
work in the computational study of turbulence and hypersonic
flow. He was instrumental in forming the Center for
Turbulence Research and served on the center's steering
committee. He supervised numerous students and was valued
highly by his students and colleagues at Stanford as a
teacher, mentor, and friend.
Dean is survived by his wife, Marguerite; son, Donald
Chapman, of Santa Monica, California; daughter, Anita Hir-
sch, M.D., and three grandchildren, Rebecca, Sarah and
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MEMORIAL TRIBUTES
David Fingerhood, all of Belfast Valley, Maryland. He is
also survived by his brother, Tom Chapman, of Murrieta,
California, and his sister, Carmen Benson, of Downey, Cal
. ~ .
tornla.
An inspiring leader of scientific research and a good friend,
Dean Chapman will be greatly missed by all who knew him.
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