Thanasis Economou
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Thanasis Economou
Senior Scientist, Enrico Fermi Institute

Areas of Expertise:

  • Chemical Analysis
  • Mars Rovers
  • Robotic Spacecraft Instrumentation
Media Contact:
Steve Koppes
(773) 702-8366
s-koppes@uchicago.edu

Background:


A native of Greece, Thanasis (Tom) Economou has been building instruments for interplanetary spacecraft since the mid-1960s. Currently he is associated with three of NASA’s robotic missions: the Mars Exploration Rovers, the Cassini mission to Mars, and the now-complete Stardust mission to Comet Wild-2, which has been redirected to a second cometary target. Economou also built the Alpha Proton X-ray Spectrometer that successfully performed the first chemical analysis of martian rocks aboard the Mars Pathfinder rover in 1997. Working in the laboratory of Anthony Turkevich, he contributed to the alpha backscattering experiment of three robotic Surveyor space probes that landed on the moon in 1967-68. With Turkevich during the 1970s and 1980s, he also conducted basic nuclear physics research on the subatomic structure of matter using the most advanced particle accelerators at Los Alamos, Argonne and Fermi National Accelerator laboratories. During the 1990s they performed an important double beta decay experiment of Uranium-238 to Plutonium-238, suggesting for the first time that neutrinos consists of a small quantity of mass.

News clippings:
After storm, Mars rovers go back to work
MSNBC
August 29, 2007

Cassini Finds Particles Near Saturn's Moon Enceladus
NASA JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
April 26, 2005

'Stardust' craft on way to Earth after scooping comet particles.
POPULAR MECHANICS
January 12, 2005

U. of C. researchers have cosmic success
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
January 11, 2004

Press releases:

Anthony Tuzzolino, Space Physicist, 1931-2008
January 29, 2008

Comet dust from NASA mission under analysis at University of Chicago laboratory
February 20, 2006

University of Chicago instrument detects particles near Saturn’s moon Enceladus
April 27, 2005

University of Chicago instrument ready to begin four-year study of Saturn’s rings
June 17, 2004

University of Chicago instruments to reach comet, Mars in same busy week
December 29, 2003

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Chronicle articles:
Changes in argon on Mars prompt new observations
August 16, 2007

University instrument collects data on Stardust
July 15, 2004

University scientists celebrate rover landing
January 8, 2004

Turkevich, 1916–2002, studied composition of universe
October 10, 2002

From Mars to asteroids
February 4, 1999

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Additional materials:
Website

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