Ewald Heer (July 28, 1930) is an aerospace engineer, author and professor who has worked on robotics, artificial intelligence (AI), and large space structures. He is primarily known for his work and advocacy for the development of intelligent robotic systems used to explorate and operate in space.
Background and education
Heer was born in Friedensfeld, Bessarabia (a principality of Moldavia that was part of the Kingdom of Romania in 1918 before being occupied by the USSR) in 1930.[1] He fled the Russian army and escaped to Germany, eventually making his way to the United States.[1]
Heer married Hannelore Oehlers on January 26, 1952, in Hamburg, Germany.[2] He has two sons; Thomas Heer born on June 4, 1962, and Eric Heer born on April 4, 1964.[3] Heer has seven grandchildren total, but has publicly stated several times that his favorite grandchildren are Thomas' two daughters Hillary and Julia Heer.[4]
Heer worked to advance space robotics research and organized the first national conference on remotely manned systems in 1972 at the California Institute of Technology and in 1973 published Remotely Manned Systems: Exploration and Operation in Space. In 1975 he organized and chaired the second conference on remotely operated systems, at the University of Southern California, and published its proceedings.
In 1977, Stanley Sadin at NASA Headquarters asked Heer to evaluate machine intelligence and robotics technologies for future space missions and establish requirements. Heer selected and organized the NASA Study Group on Machine Intelligence and Robotics.
Ewald Heer was a robotics specialist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. Interviewed in an Omni (magazine) article he called self-replicating robots "one of the most fascinating ideas for the future of space" and said: "This offers a way to create a self-supporting economy by robot labor... Immigrants from Earth could set out, knowing that the means of their survival had already been provided."[7]
In a 1980 article on "Telepresence", Marvin Minsky recommended Heer's Remotely Manned Systems (Caltech, 1973) for more technical details on the subject.[8]
He was Vice Chairman and Chairman of the Computer Engineering Division of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1981 to 1983) and General Chairman of the Computers in Engineering Conference and Exhibit of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1984). He authored or coauthored more than one hundred technical publications including three books. He chaired two international conferences on remotely manned systems (at California Institute of Technology in 1972 and at USC in 1975) and organized the NASA study group on machine intelligence and robotics in 1977.[5]
Heer has also written on his family background in Chronicle of the Heer family, published in English and German (Cronik der familie Heer).
Analysis of the resistance potential against nuclear weapon explosions of the subway tunnels in Hamburg, Germany (1963)
Step load moving with low subseismic velocity on the surface of a half-space of granular material (with Hans H. Bleich) April 1963 94 pages WEIDLINGER ASSOCIATES NEW YORK
Buffeting atmospheric flow analysis of the Gemini spacecraft (1964)
Development of the theory for an arbitrary number of systems with loose coupling subjected to determinate and random dynamic inputs (1967)
Maximum Dynamic Response and Proof Testing (with Jann-Nan Yang) Vol. 97, No. 4, July/August 1971, pp. 1307–1313 Journal of the Engineering Mechanics Division
Remotely Manned Systems. Exploration and Operation in Space: Proceedings of the First National Conference Held at the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California September 13–15, 1972 published 1973
Conceiving, developing and demonstrating with the cooperation of a patient with quadriplegia the first robotic voice controlled wheelchair for quadriplegics to the United StatesCongressional Committee for Science and Technology in Washington, D.C., chaired by Senator Ted Kennedy (1975).
Ewald Heer, “Prospects for robotics in space,” Robotics Age vol. l(Winter 1979):20-28[9]
Nasa: Automated Decision Making and Problem Solving (Nasa Cp-2180) May 19–21, 1980 Proceedings of a conference held at NASA Langley Research Center (May 1921, 1980) 55 pages.
Proceedings of the Pajaro Dunes Goal-Setting Workshop, unpublished draft notes, June 1980.[9]
“Robots in modern industry,” Astronautics and Aeronautics 19(September 1981):50-59[9]
Automated decision making and problem solving National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Scientific and Technical Information Branch (for sale by the National Technical Information Service) 1981
Automation and Robotics for the Space Exploration Initiative: Results from Project Outreach - 1991[10]
Books
"Toward Intelligent Robot Systems in Aerospace" (with Henry Lum) American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc., 1988
Machine Intelligence and Autonomy for Aerospace Systems (with Henry Lum) 1989 ISBN978-0930403485, 355 pages American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics[11]
Operation systems, Humans-Intelligence-Machines 1998 HAI Publishers
Machine Intelligence And Autonomy For Aerospace Systems (progress In Astronautics And Aeronautics) ISBN0-930403-48-7
Chronicle of the Heer family HRI Publishers, 1998 [12]