The Mercury News

Eminent Bay Area rocket scientist prepares to turn 100.

Altman’s work helped propel the U.S. into the space age

- By Jerimiah Oetting joetting@bayareanew­sgroup.com

On the brink of his 100th trip around the sun, the secret to David Altman’s long and illustriou­s life isn’t rocket science. At least, not entirely.

“I just went with the flow, whichever way it went,” he said. “I had a good time, and I enjoyed myself!”

It’s a strategy that seems to have worked well for Altman, who will officially become a centenaria­n on Thursday. The dizzying number of his accomplish­ments in rocket science — papers written, patents held, awards won — seems to indicate that not a moment was wasted in all of his 100 years. His work helped the U.S. advance into the space age, through the moon landings and beyond.

Even in retirement, Altman continues his lifetime of curiosity and innovation, helping develop new fuel types that promise to make rockets safer and less environmen­tally harmful.

“It would be totally correct to describe him as a true American rocket pioneer,” said Brian Cantwell, a professor of aeronautic­s at Stanford University and a colleague of Altman’s.

Altman recently spoke with the Mercury News from his home in Menlo Park, accompanie­d by his daughter Jan Altman, who affectiona­tely refers to her father as “Popsicle.”

Though he’s lived in California for most of his life, Altman, who grew up in New York and attended Cornell University as an undergradu­ate, planned on sticking around the East Coast. But the head of chemistry at Columbia University warned him that anti-Semitism was rampant among the staff there, and he should consider his second choice.

“He was very frank with me,” Altman recalled. “He said, ‘If you have an appointmen­t (in Berkeley), I advise that you take it. You’ll be more comfortabl­e there.’ ”

So the flow of Altman’s life led him to California, where he crossed paths with Oppenheime­r and Einstein. He earned his Ph.D. in chemistry at UC Berkeley in just three years and went on to contribute to the Manhattan Project.

“When I first went there, I didn’t know it was for a bomb,” he said. “I thought it was nuclear energy.”

But like the other scientists, Altman pieced the truth

together over time. He said Einstein knew the Manhattan Project was creating a bomb, too.

“That was a big thing: why should we work on a nuclear bomb?” he asked. “Well, it was going to be them or us.”

After World War II and his work with the Manhattan Project, he said his background in chemistry, physics and math could only lead to one place — “combustion, explosions and rockets!”

Altman was a chief chemist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory near Pasadena for a decade, starting in the mid-1940s, where he published scores of scientific studies focused on rocket propulsion.

He eventually became

vice president of a new division of United Technologi­es, called Chemical Systems Division, or CSD, in 1959. His work at CSD helped earn him the Apollo Achievemen­t Award for his contributi­ons toward the moon landing.

CSD was in Sunnyvale, but it also tested rocket motors at a carefully guarded site in Coyote Valley for 45 years until operations were moved to Florida in 2004. The property was sold to the Santa Clara County Open Space Authority in 2014.

“(CSD) built some of the largest rocket motors ever tested, and they played a key role in the developmen­t of boosters for all sorts of applicatio­ns,” Cantwell said. “Dave was at the center of that until he retired.”

Though Altman retired in 1981, he remained an incredibly ambitious scientist.

“When I met him in 1994, he was 12 years into his retirement,” said Arif Karabeyogl­u, a protégé of Altman’s. “He didn’t stop after retirement, he kept going.”

Karabeyogl­u was a student from Turkey earning his Ph.D. at Stanford when he and Altman first met. He said Altman motivated him to explore hybrid rocket fuels, a direction that has shaped his career for 25 years.

“He is one of the few guys in the world, maybe the only one, who has actively worked in three types of chemical propulsion systems: solid, liquids and hybrids,” Karabeyogl­u said.

Hybrid rockets manage to dodge some of the drawbacks of both liquid and solid rockets. Karabeyogl­u describes solid rockets as “huge sticks of dynamite” — once the

combustion starts, it’s impossible to stop. But hybrid rockets aren’t explosive until the solid and liquid fuels are mixed. That mixing can be controlled, providing an off-switch to combustion.

While serving on the committee that investigat­ed the Challenger disaster in 1986, Altman realized that having an off-switch might have prevented the tragedy.

After some important breakthrou­ghs — particular­ly the use of explosivel­y burning candle wax as a rocket fuel, which is safer to handle and less toxic to the environmen­t — Karabeyogl­u, Cantwell and Altman decided to form a company specializi­ng in hybrid fuels. At nearly 80 years old, Altman found himself as head of the Space Propulsion Group, running the company out of his home office in Menlo

Park.

“If you look at his career and his life, it’s amazing,” said Karabeyogl­u, who took over the company from Altman in 2005. “He’s done pretty much everything in rocket propulsion.”

Karabeyogl­u lives in Turkey but said he will be flying back to the U.S. for Altman’s 100th birthday. Cantwell also will be joining.

“Even now, we still talk about rockets,” Karabeyogl­u said. “He’s almost 100 years old, and I can tell you, he’s smarter than I am.”

These days, David Altman is still going with the flow, although a lifetime of playing tennis makes that a little harder on his knees. His office is filled with images and artifacts of his life. He admits some have gone missing, like the moon rock he was gifted after Apollo 11, or his goldplated

shovel that broke the ground for the CSD facility in Sunnyvale.

But the real treasures fill every corner of his office and cover the walls of the hallway outside it. A dashing photo of Altman and his wife, Beverly, on a 1946 trip to Yosemite. A goofy picture of him, gray-haired and dapper, grinning wildly on a swing, next to the words “a spontaneou­s homage to my youth.” And photos of his daughters, including one with Jan in a frame that says, “To my favorite Popsicle.”

Karabeyogl­u said it’s scientists like Altman — the ones who live quietly behind their accomplish­ments, the ones most of us haven’t heard of — who make things work and push things forward.

“They’re the heroes, right? We need to celebrate them, as much as we can.”

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 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Rocket scientist David Altman, at home in Menlo Park with daughter Jan Altman, will celebrate his 100th birthday on Thursday.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Rocket scientist David Altman, at home in Menlo Park with daughter Jan Altman, will celebrate his 100th birthday on Thursday.

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