Jim, you made our lives better. Your playful sense of humor kept our hearts warm and light. Your gentle patience, humble integrity and unassuming manner strengthened us. And your calm, cool-headed approach to life’s obstacles inspired us.
We watched you embrace your passion for gazing at full moons and distant stars, first as a child with toy planetariums and backyard telescopes, then as an adult exploring national parks with your cameras and helping NASA study the sun and moon. We marveled at the meticulous eye and careful planning you brought to photography, especially when you captured the awe in natural scenes like a full moon rising over Yosemite. And we treasure memories of your affection for the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, your perfect 60-minute gravy and your appetite for repairing salvaged treasures.
The youngest of seven children, Jim Strong was born July 7, 1955, to June Conrow Strong and John Matthews Strong in Glen Ellyn, Ill. The family moved in 1959 to the Palo Alto home that was their base camp for 33 years. Jim shared many adventures with his close-knit family, including camping, stargazing, Scouting, target shooting, fishing and photography. With his brother John he built an electric train diorama, flew RC planes with their dad, staged battles involving toy soldiers and Lincoln Logs, and built countless model ships and planes—putting the ships out to sea in the family pool and hanging the planes airborne from their bedroom ceiling. Jim also loved playing for the Liddicoat’s Little League team as well as J.V. and varsity soccer at Palo Alto High School.
Jim received his BS in mechanical engineering in January 1978 from Notre Dame University, then worked briefly on the AV-8B Harrier as a flight-test engineer at McDonnell Douglas in St. Louis. After migrating to NASA Ames Research Center in Mountain View at age 23, Jim served as test engineer/manager in nearly every wind tunnel at Ames. This included aerodynamic testing of Space Shuttle insulation tiles and testing supersonic parachute deployments for the Mars Science Lab.
Jim transitioned from aeronautics testing to spacecraft operations in 2007, becoming a flight controller for NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation & Sensing Satellite. LCROSS confirmed the presence of water ice on the lunar surface when it hit its lunar target in October 2009. Most recently, Jim was the Ames project and mission operations manager for NASA’s Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph satellite. IRIS observes the solar atmosphere to help explain what causes ejection of solar material—including coronal mass ejections that cause the space weather that can disrupt Earthbound electronics.
That Jim loved his career was evident to all those he mentored and worked with. He was approaching his 39th anniversary at Ames at the time of his death on January 28 during a fire in his Santa Clara home. He was preceded in death by his parents and is survived by his six siblings—Jean Hurrle, Martha Strong, Frances Strong and husband Tom Williams, John Strong Jr., Barbara Mitchell and husband Fred Mitchell, and Mary Strong—along with eight nieces and nephews and many friends and colleagues who were looking forward to many more years of enjoying his presence in their lives.
A man who loved life, Jim would want us to feel happiness when we think of him. A celebration of his life was held March 7 at NASA Ames Research Center, where colleagues, friends and family shared their memories of Jim and his remarkable character. In memory of Jim, consider making a donation to a charity of your choice in Jim’s name, hugging a loved one or savoring the vast night sky.