- Stuhlinger, Ernst
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▪ 2009German-born American rocket scientistborn Dec. 19, 1913, Niederrimbach, Ger.died May 25, 2008, Huntsville, Ala.was a member of the German team of scientists (led by Wernher von Braun) who developed the V-2 rockets used by the Nazis against the British during World War II and later helped build the American Saturn V rocket, which carried the first astronauts to the Moon in 1969. After the war, Stuhlinger and the rest of von Braun's team surrendered to the Americans and were taken to Fort Bliss, Texas, to work on the U.S. space program; the team was relocated to Huntsville in 1950. The timing device that Stuhlinger invented played a critical role in the success of the Explorer I satellite launch in 1958. He also helped develop the solar X-ray telescope used (1973–74) in the Skylab space station. Stuhlinger worked at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville as director of the Space Sciences Laboratory (1960–68) and associate director for science (1968–75). After retiring in 1975, he taught at the University of Alabama. In 2005 the Electric Rocket Propulsion Society awarded him a medal for outstanding achievement in electric propulsion. Stuhlinger wrote the textbook Ion Propulsion for Space Flight (1964) and co-wrote the biography Wernher von Braun: Crusader for Space (1993). He became a U.S. citizen in 1955.
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Universalium. 2010.