Dr. Michael Kezirian
Michael
Kezirian, Ph.D. is
Adjunct Associate Professor of Astronautics
at the University of Southern California and was recently
Associate Technical Fellow at Boeing.
Michael was a safety design engineer for the Boeing Commercial
Crew Development Program (CC-Dev) and a design analyst for the Nitrogen
Oxygen Recharge System (NORS) for the International Space Station.
Previously, in support of the Space Station Program, he was the Boeing
Vehicle Safety Lead for the Endeavour Vehicle, responsible for data
products that were part of the Certification of Flight Readiness (COFR).
For the Shuttle Program, he was the lead analyst for the Composite
Overwrapped Pressure Vessel (COPV) risk assessment team. The statistical
reliability model for the stochastic process of composite stress rupture
was the cornerstone of the flight rationale for this newly-identified
failure mode. At one point, the COPVs were carried as a “Top 10” program
risk.
Michael is an Associate Fellow of the American Institute of Aeronautics
and Astronautics (AIAA). He chairs the AIAA Aerospace Pressure Vessel
Committee on Standards, and is responsible for the AIAA S-080, S-081, and S-089
documents. He is a member of the AIAA’s Space Operations Support
Technical and Public Policy Committees at the national level. He is
also an elected Councilor of the AIAA Houston Section.
He is a Fellow of the International Association for the Advancement of
Space Safety. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the International
Space Safety Foundation.
Michael earned his BSc in Chemical Engineering at Brown University (with
his junior year at University of Cambridge) in 1989. He earned his MSc
in Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in
1992 and his Ph.D.
in Chemical Engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1996.
He received the NASA Astronaut Achievement (Silver Snoopy) Award in 1996.
Read his
LinkedIn profile.