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  1. She was known as the "human computer," was responsible for calculating the trajectory of Apollo 11 to space, and was an inspiration behind the film "Hidden F...

    • 2 min
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    • Brut America
    • Overview
    • A lifelong passion for numbers
    • Amazing Pictures From the Apollo Moon Missions
    • Computing the space race

    The pioneering mathematician helped send the first U.S. astronauts to space—including on the Apollo flights to the moon.

    NASA research mathematician Katherine Johnson sits at her desk at the Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia.

    Katherine Johnson, the stereotype-shattering mathematician whose calculations helped sling NASA astronauts into space, died February 24 at age 101.

    “Katherine G. Johnson refused to be limited by society’s expectations of her gender and race while expanding the boundaries of humanity’s reach,” Barack Obama said when he awarded Johnson the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015.

    For decades, Johnson, an African-American woman, was among NASA’s largely uncelebrated pioneers. Her exquisite facility with analytic geometry formed the foundation for NASA’s most daring space missions of the 1960s, including the first crewed flights to the moon. But like the other black women who worked for NASA at the time, Johnson remained mostly unknown outside of the space agency—until 2016, when Margot Lee Shetterly published the book Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race.

    Telling the story of NASA’s “computers”—the women who quite literally plotted and computed aeronautical and astronautical trajectories—the book and a subsequent Oscar-nominated movie launched Johnson into the international spotlight when she was in her mid-90s.

    Johnson was born in White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia, on August 26, 1918. World War I raged on, Woodrow Wilson was in his second term as president of the United States, and the Cold War-fueled space race was still decades away. Women could not vote, and racial discrimination was legal, systemic, and rampant.

    As a child, Johnson displayed a natural aptitude for learning. By age four, she could spell and multiply, and she counted everything she could quantify.

    “Math has always come easily to me. I loved numbers and numbers loved me. They followed me everywhere … that was just the way my mind worked,” she wrote in her 2019 autobiography, Reaching for the Moon. “I loved to learn so much that going to school alone wasn’t enough.”

    By age 10, Johnson was in high school. At 18, she’d graduated from college, earning a degree in mathematics from West Virginia State College.

    But as a woman, and especially as a woman of color, Johnson’s schooling and professional life were fraught with barriers. Widespread racism and segregationist policies limited her options, even though her talent was limitless.

    “You could be a nurse or a teacher,” she said in a video interview with MAKERS, describing her early career trajectory.

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    Apollo 17 mission Commander Eugene Cernan checks out the lunar roving vehicle (LRV) at the Taurus-Littrow landing site in December 1972. LRVs, also called moon buggies, are electric vehicles designed to expand astronauts' range of exploration on the low-gravity surface of the moon. The east end of the moon's South Massif rises in the background at right.

    Moon Buggy

    Apollo 17 mission Commander Eugene Cernan checks out the lunar roving vehicle (LRV) at the Taurus-Littrow landing site in December 1972. LRVs, also called moon buggies, are electric vehicles designed to expand astronauts' range of exploration on the low-gravity surface of the moon. The east end of the moon's South Massif rises in the background at right.

    Photograph courtesy NASA

    Johnson’s career transformed in 1957, when the Soviet Union launched Sputnik, the first artificial satellite, and ignited a space race with the U.S. In the late 1950s, as NASA pondered how to launch humans into space and bring them safely home, Johnson’s responsibilities shifted to calculating orbital trajectories.

    For the next decade, the men who bravely flew beyond the atmosphere relied on the precision of Johnson’s hand-drawn calculations. In 1961, Johnson calculated the trajectory for Alan Shepard’s Freedom 7 capsule, the first U.S. spacecraft to carry a human, which flew to the edge of space before splashing down in the Atlantic Ocean.

    The next year, when John Glenn became the first U.S. astronaut to circle Earth, he only climbed aboard the Friendship 7 capsule after Johnson verified the automated calculations made by an IBM computer. (The task took her a day and a half, and the numbers matched.)

    Later, in 1969, when Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins headed for the moon, they did so using Johnson’s mathematics. “I computed the path that would get you there,” Johnson recalled to MAKERS. “We told them how fast they would be going, and the moon would be there by the time you got there.”

    Johnson retired from NASA in 1986, having played a role in every crewed spaceflight program the agency had launched up to that point, from Mercury to the space shuttle.

    “Ms. Johnson helped our nation enlarge the frontiers of space even as she made huge strides that also opened doors for women and people of color,” NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said in a statement. “We will never forget her courage and leadership and the milestones we could not have reached without her.”

  2. Feb 24, 2020 · 24 February 2020. Reuters. Katherine Johnson was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2015. Pioneering African-American Nasa mathematician Katherine Johnson has died at the age of 101 ...

  3. In 2016, she was portrayed by Taraji P. Henson in the movie “Hidden Figures.”. In 2017, NASA Langley Research Center named its new Computational Research Facility in her honor. And in 2019, she was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal. Katherine died Feb. 24, 2020, at her home in Newport News, Virginia, at the age of 101.

  4. Feb 25, 2020 · Mathematician Katherine Johnson, a woman who broke racial and gender barriers at NASA, has died at the age of 101. She is best known for her work as a “human computer” that helped make early human space flight possible. Johnson’s achievements include calculating—with a pencil and a slide rule—the precise paths to allow Apollo 11 to ...

  5. Jan 30, 2024 · Katherine Johnson: An American Hero. Pioneering NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson was part of a group of African-American women who worked on critical mathematical calculations in the early days of human spaceflight.

  6. Feb 24, 2020 · She died Monday at 101. Katherine Johnson, a mathematician who was one of NASA's human "computers" and an unsung hero of the space agency's early days, died Monday. She calculated the flight path ...

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