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Ronald Parise
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==Career== Upon graduation in 1979, Parise accepted a position at Operations Research Inc. (ORI) where he was involved in developing [[avionics]] requirements definitions and performing failure mode analyses for several NASA missions. In 1980 he began work at [[Computer Sciences Corporation]] in the [[International Ultraviolet Explorer]] (IUE) operations center as a data management scientist and in 1981 became the section manager of the IUE hardcopy facility. In 1981 he began work on the development of a new [[Spacelab]] experiment called the [[Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope]] (UIT). His responsibilities involved flight hardware and software development, electronic system design, and mission planning activities for the UIT project. In 1984 he was selected by NASA as a payload specialist in support of the newly formed [[STS-35|Astro]] mission series. During his twelve years as a payload specialist he was involved in mission planning, simulator development, integration and test activities, flight procedure development, and scientific data analysis, in addition to his flight crew responsibilities for the Astro program. At the completion of the Astro program, Parise assumed an advanced planning and communications engineering support role for a variety of human space flight projects including [[Mir]], [[International Space Station]] (ISS), and the [[X-38]]. Parise engaged in a number of astronomical research projects utilizing data from ground-based observatories, the [[Orbiting Astronomical Observatory#OAO-3 .28Copernicus.29|Copernicus satellite]] (OAO-3), IUE, and the Astro observatory. His research topics, including [[circumstellar dust|circumstellar matter]] in [[binary star]] systems and the evolutionary status of stars in [[globular clusters]], resulted in several professional publications. A veteran of two space flights, Parise logged more than 614 hours and 10.6 million miles in space. He served as a payload specialist aboard STS-35 in 1990 and STS-67 in 1995. At the end of his career, Parise supported the [[Goddard Space Flight Center]], Networks and Mission Services Project, in the area of advanced communications planning for human spaceflight missions. He was also involved with projects in the Advanced Architectures and Automation Branch that developed the use of standard Internet Protocols (IP) in space data transmission applications.
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