Slava G. Turyshev (russian: Слава Турышев) is a Russian physicist now working in the US at the
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL). He is known for his investigations of the
Pioneer anomaly, affecting
Pioneer 10 and
Pioneer 11 spacecraft, and for his attempt to recover early data of the Pioneer spacecraft to shed light on such a phenomenon. He is interested in:
* Science motivation, mission design, and data analysis of high-precision gravitational experiments in space.
* Relativistic cosmology and alternative theories of gravity; theory of gravity-wave astronomy, including wave generation, propagation and detection.
* Theory of and modeling for high-precision astronomical reference frames; lunar and interplanetary laser ranging; pulsar timing experiments.
* Optimization and control algorithms for long-baseline optical interferometry; analytical and numerical techniques for the white-light fringe parameter estimation.
He was the
principal investigator of the LATOR mission aimed at testing
parameterized post-Newtonian formalism with high accuracy. Dr. Turyshev chaired several workshops at the
International Space Science Institute The International Space Science Institute (ISSI) is an Institute of Advanced Studies based in Bern, Switzerland.
The institute's work is interdisciplinary, focusing on the study of the Solar System, and encompasses planetary sciences, astrophysics, ...
on the
Pioneer anomaly and the
flyby anomaly.
In 2020, Slava Turyshev presented his idea of Direct Multi-pixel Imaging and Spectroscopy of an Exoplanet with a
Solar Gravitational Lens Mission. The lens could reconstruct the exoplanet image with ~25 km-scale surface resolution in 6 months of integration time, enough to see surface features and signs of habitability. His proposal was selected for the Phase III of the
NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts
The NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts (NIAC) is a NASA program for development of far reaching, long term advanced concepts by "creating breakthroughs, radically better or entirely new aerospace concepts". The program operated under the name ...
. Turyshev proposes to use realistic-sized
solar sails (~16 vanes of 10^3 m^2) to achieve the needed high velocity at
perihelion (~150 km/sec), reaching 547 AU in 17 years.
Bibliometric information
As of November 2013, the
h index
The ''h''-index is an author-level metric that measures both the productivity and citation impact of the publications, initially used for an individual scientist or scholar. The ''h''-index correlates with obvious success indicators such as ...
of Turyshev, as released by the
NASA ADS
The SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS) is an online database of over 16 million astronomy and physics papers from both peer reviewed and non-peer reviewed sources. Abstracts are available free online for almost all articles, and full scann ...
database, is 23, with more than 2000 non-self citations.
His tori
[
] index and riq
index are 25.8 and 267, respectively.
References
External links
NASA webpage on Dr. Turyshev
Russian physicists
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
{{Russia-physicist-stub