NASA Employee: From Climbing Rocks to Rocket Science

NASA's Jason Hopper is shown at the E Test Complex at NASA's Stennis Space Center.
NASA/Danny Nowlin

Jason Hopper's journey to NASA started with assessing the risk of stepping into the unknown.

One day, while taking a break from his hobby of rock climbing at Mississippi State University, a fellow student noticed Hopper reading a rocket propulsion textbook with a photo of a space shuttle launch on the cover.

Rocket propulsion - the technology that propels vehicles into space, usually through liquid rocket engines or solid rocket motors - is a highly complex field. Engineers rigorously test the propulsion systems and components to understand their capabilities and limitations, ensuring rockets can safely reach space.

"A guy just walked up and randomly said, 'Hey, my dad works testing rocket engines,'" Hopper recalled.

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