Dr. Alvin G. Yew
Alvin
G. Yew, Ph.D. is Program Manager at NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC).
Alvin has a diverse and rewarding background as an aerospace
engineer with over a decade of accumulated experience at Goddard Space
Flight Center. He has participated in hardware development for missions
including Astro-H, MMS, GPM, and FASTSat. He has also directed
numerous research efforts to conceive and validate novel spaceflight
capabilities, particularly for Guidance, Navigation, and Control
components on small satellite architectures.
He has demonstrated cutting-edge hardware with
NASA’s Flight Opportunities Program through zero-gravity parabolic
flights, developed early-stage ice sampling mechanisms for planetary
science research, and worked in McMurdo Antarctica to upgrade NASA’s
communications network.
Alvin coauthored
Lab-on-chip clinorotation system for live-cell microscopy under
simulated microgravity,
Effects of angular frequency during clinorotation on mesenchymal stem cell morphology and migration,
Low Peclet number mass and momentum transport in microcavities,
and
Role of load history in intervertebral disc mechanics and intradiscal
pressure generation.
Alvin completed his doctorate in mechanical engineering at the
University of Maryland and at the National Institute of Standards and
Technology, where he performed research in space biology.
His dissertation was
Clinorotation time-lapse microscopy for live-cell assays in simulated
microgravity.
Watch NASA NIAC
interview.