Stephen Barsi
Cleveland, Ohio, United States
592 followers
500+ connections
View mutual connections with Stephen
Stephen can introduce you to 10+ people at NASA Glenn Research Center
or
New to LinkedIn? Join now
By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement, Privacy Policy, and Cookie Policy.
View mutual connections with Stephen
or
New to LinkedIn? Join now
By clicking Continue to join or sign in, you agree to LinkedIn’s User Agreement, Privacy Policy, and Cookie Policy.
Activity
592 followers
-
Stephen Barsi shared thisJoin our prop team and be part of returning humanity to the moonNASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration
NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration
4moStephen Barsi shared thisWe’re seeking our next aerospace engineer in liquid propulsion systems at NASA Glenn Research Center! You’ll research, design, analyze, test, certify, and operate advanced space propulsion systems that help power humanity’s journey beyond Earth. Bring your expertise, curiosity, and passion to a team making spaceflight history! Apply by March 26: usajobs.gov/job/861323100 -
-
-
Stephen Barsi shared thisWe're hiring! We've got openings for 2 ESM propulsion engineers. Apply at the link below: #NASA #Orion #ESM https://lnkd.in/gT6dst4iAerospace Engineer, AST, Liquid Propulsion Systems (Direct Hire)Aerospace Engineer, AST, Liquid Propulsion Systems (Direct Hire)
-
Stephen Barsi shared thisWe've posted two student internship slots for next summer to work on ESM propulsion. Apply below if interested: https://lnkd.in/grJTdfmR
-
Stephen Barsi shared thisHad a great time talking with students at Manhattan University about Orion and Service Module Propulsion. Thanks for organizing Stephen Peluso, Mohammad Naraghi, Parisa Saboori #ManhattanUniversity #NASA #Artemis
-
Stephen Barsi reposted thisStephen Barsi reposted thisFantastic #roundtable at the #SpacePropulsion2024 to discuss on the #future of #servicing for #LEO and #beyond. Top notch participants on a very hot topic for the #propulsion community. Tobias Langener Stephen Barsi Tomás Cruz Markus Jäger MANSOURI Jamila SPACE PROPULSION CONFERENCE #NASA #ESA #TheExplorationCompany #Airbus #nyx #starlab #susie #huracan #waterpropulsion #refueling #nuclearpropulsion #airbreathing
-
Stephen Barsi shared thisStephen Barsi shared thisGood Article Eric Berger! The European Service Module #esm has performed outstandingly during the #orion outbound powered flyby behind Earth’s moon. The #Aerojet AJ10 engine with #spaceshuttle heritage, part of our propulsion system built by Airbus Defence and Space, worked spot on and delivered the required velocity increment to continue towards mission success. The European Space Agency - ESA built service module is a critical component of the NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration #artemis program. Days like today strengthen this partnership. Prop. We deliver. A velocity increment at a time. Together with Jan-Hendrik Meiss Pedro José Herráiz Alijas Víctor Fernández Villacé Marcus Hennekens Michael Belair Stephen Barsi Chris Popp Przemyslav Walko, Jon Millard, Benedikt Determann. Go Orion. See you back on December 11th.
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisAls ich die großartigen Nominierten kennenlernte, hätte ich nicht gedacht, zu gewinnen. Vielen Dank für den Award und die tollen Femworx Messe!Stephen Barsi liked thisShe’s helping send humans back to the Moon. 🚀 Annemarie Lohse receives the Engineer Woman Award 2026. As Major Spacecraft Delivery Lead at Airbus Defence and Space, she is responsible for core subsystems of the European Service Module powering NASA’s Orion spacecraft. Her work? ➡️ Life-support systems ➡️ Thermal control Structural integrity under extreme space conditions In other words: systems where failure is not an option. With a background in reliability engineering (RAMS) and leadership across complex international programs, Annemarie represents what engineering excellence looks like at scale. “Annemarie Lohse represents engineering excellence at the highest level,” says Dr. Jochen Köckler. #FEMWORX #GrowingTogetherRiseHigher #WomenInSTEM
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisStephen Barsi liked thisThe countdown has begun. Orion and the team are ready. At KSC, we’re putting the final touches on the SLS rocket and Orion for the crew’s journey around the Moon. Teams loaded late-stow items and brought Orion’s flight batteries to full charge to power avionics, life support, and communications through launch and early flight. Tonight, engineers will configure the pad for liftoff ahead of the start of the launch window on April 1st at 6:24 PM. The Orion Mission Evaluation Team in Mission Control Houston is set. We’re steady and ready to see our spacecraft fly on Artemis II.
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisStephen Barsi liked thisDear Artemis II, I can only see you from a distance of many kilometres and this blurry picture does not show any of the hardware, located deep in the heart of the Orion European Service Module's propulsion system, I extensively worked on for more than a decade. But even from this distance, the impressions are incredible and the excitement is overwhelming. Now is the time to come to life, to roar into the sky, to prime your systems and to make your way to the Moon. Godspeed and safe travels Reid, Victor, Christina & Jeremy! Ad lunam et ultra NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration European Space Agency - ESA Airbus Defence and Space ArianeGroup #Artemis #Orbital Propulsion #Lampoldshausen
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisStephen Barsi liked thisAnother day at Kennedy Space Center preparing our Orion spacecraft (Integrity) to send humans back to the moon for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972. I’ve spent the better part of the last year hands on with this spacecraft every step of the way. It really hit me today how close we are to getting this beautiful machine off the ground and beginning the Artemis II Crew’s 10 day journey to the moon and back. We are back at the pad and days from a potential launch now. It will be bittersweet when I leave Tuesday to support a Wednesday launch attempt from Mission Control Houston and likely saying goodbye to Integrity for the last time before launch. Preparing for this mission is undoubtedly the highlight of my 23 years at NASA. Our first launch window opens April 1 at 6:24 ET for 2 hours!
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisStephen Barsi liked thisDuring Artemis II, four astronauts will venture around the Moon and back aboard the Orion spacecraft, paving the way for future exploration missions to the lunar surface and Mars. 🚀 Meet a few more employees from our Cleveland center who’ve contributed to the agency's Artemis campaign ⬇️ -Marcus Hennekens leads the engineers working on the Orion European Service Module’s propulsion system. -Peter Psaras helps monitor the spacecraft’s propulsion systems before launch, during flight, and after landing. -Leah Struchen Deans is the deputy chief engineer for the Orion European Service Module. More on Artemis II: https://lnkd.in/eQkj6T6F
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisStephen Barsi liked thisPicked up the keys and drove to the pad. Just make sure it’s locked before you leave!😅 #NASA #LockheedMartin #Boeing #Aerojet #SLS #Artemis #Orion #ULA #CWTI #ARES #KLXS #NorthropGrumman #CAA #WDR #RocketRedNecks #SpaceX #BlueOrigin #Axiom
-
Stephen Barsi liked thisStephen Barsi liked this"When ships to sail the void between the stars have been built, there will step forth men to sail these ships" — Johannes Kepler For Reid, Victor, Christina, and Jeremy. Go Orion. Go Artemis II. 📷 : Anthony Corneau
Experience
Education
-
Case Western Reserve University
-
-
Dissertation: "Ventless Pressure Control of Cryogenic Storage Tanks"
-
-
-
-
-
-
View Stephen’s full profile
-
See who you know in common
-
Get introduced
-
Contact Stephen directly
Other similar profiles
Explore more posts
-
ashor elmargane
Libyan air force media center • 2K followers
60,000 feet above Earth, NASA is hunting for the minerals that power phones, EVs and clean energy NASA has a new high-tech sensor to help the search for critical minerals in the American West. The sensor is called AVIRIS-5 (Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer-5), and it comes from technology developed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) back in the 1970s. About the size of a microwave, AVIRIS-5 fits inside the nose of one of NASA's ER-2 high-altitude research aircraft. The sensor's first iteration was employed in 1986, and JPL has worked to improve it ever since. AVIRIS-5 is one of the newest tools in a joint research project from NASA and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) called GEMx. The project is designed to search for surface traces of critical minerals, which are central to manufacturing consumer electronics and military technology. · NASA pilot suits up to scan the Earth | Space photo of the day for Oct 3. 2025 · Mars rovers serve as scientists' eyes and ears from millions of miles away – here are the tools Perseverance used to spot a potential sign of ancient life · NASA tests drones in Death Valley | Space photo of the day for Dec. 15, 2025 GEMx is an ongoing project. One of the reasons why deserts are an ideal spot for mineral spectroscopy is because few trees grow there. Since 2023, the joint team has covered more than 366,000 square miles (950,000 square kilometers) in the vast expanse of the American West. Many of the minerals that the GEMx project is trying to find have "unique chemical structures," that reflect different wavelengths of light. By detecting this reflected light, AVIRIS-5 is able to uncover the "spectral fingerprints" that are specific to the critical minerals. The USGS defines critical minerals as those that have "significant consequences for the economic or national security of the U.S." These include aluminum, lithium, zinc, graphite, tungsten and titanium. Minerals such as these are used in the manufacturing supply chains for crucial technologies such as semiconductors, solar electricity systems or electric vehicle batteries. In March 2025, the White House issued an Executive Order to boost the production of these minerals "to the maximum possible extent," stating that American national and economic security are "now acutely threatened by our reliance upon hostile foreign powers' mineral production" Aside from helping hunt for critical minerals, spectrometers similar to AVIRIS-5 that JPL has designed over the years have also been used on spacecraft to help NASA scientists understand more about planets in our solar system, like Mars, Mercury, and Pluto. "One is en route to Europa, an ocean moon of Jupiter, to search for the chemical ingredients needed to support life," a JPL spokesperson wrote in a statement.
4
Explore top content on LinkedIn
Find curated posts and insights for relevant topics all in one place.
View top contentOthers named Stephen Barsi
2 others named Stephen Barsi are on LinkedIn
See others named Stephen Barsi