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Johnson’s Paige Whittington Builds a Symphony of Simulations

Johnson’s Paige Whittington Builds a Symphony of Simulations

  • Paige Whittington, a NASA engineer, combines her passion for music and space exploration by developing simulations to inform human spaceflight decisions.
  • As a principal flutist for Purdue University’s Wind Ensemble, Whittington learned the importance of harmonization and teamwork, skills she now applies to her work as a simulation architect at Johnson Space Center.
  • Whittington is part of the NASA Exploration Systems Simulations (NExSyS) team, which develops physics-based simulations to evaluate various vehicles and mission concepts for lunar and Mars exploration.
  • The Artemis Distributed Simulation project brings together individual simulations to enable agency teams to envision a complete Artemis mission to the lunar surface, with Whittington playing a key role in its development.
  • Whittington’s experience has taught her the importance of open communication, adaptability, and taking opportunities as they arise, skills she now applies to her work as a project manager for NASA’s JSC Engineering Orbital Dynamics software package.

What do music ensembles and human spaceflight have in common? They require the harmonization of different elements to create an inspiring opus.

NASA’s Paige Whittington has experience with both.

As a principal flutist for Purdue University’s Wind Ensemble, Whittington helped fellow flutists play beautiful music together while pursuing her graduate degree. Now, as a space exploration simulation architect at Johnson Space Center in Houston, she strives for a cross-team harmony that can inform the agency’s Moon to Mars exploration approach.

“Simulation often sits at the intersection of several teams because we integrate various designs and mission requirements,” she said. “We have to learn how to best fit those teams and their priorities together to enable cutting-edge human exploration.”

A white woman with long brown hair, wearing a blue blouse and black cardigan, sits in front of an American flag and a NASA flag.
Official NASA portrait of Paige Whittington.
NASA/Josh Valcarcel

Whittington is part of the NASA Exploration Systems Simulations (NExSyS) team, which develops physics-based simulations to evaluate various vehicles and mission concepts. Her role includes working with lunar and Mars architecture teams within NASA’s Strategy and Architecture Office to assess current and potential future elements of vehicle design, logistics, and planning.

“Our simulations help inform engineers, astronauts, and managers about the new, challenging environments that await us on the Moon and Mars,” she said.

One of the most challenging and rewarding projects she is working on is the Artemis Distributed Simulation. “NExSyS develops and maintains several individual simulations such as rovers, landers, and habitats. However, human exploration on other planetary bodies requires careful integration and coordination of these individual pieces,” she explained.

The distributed simulation brings those pieces together to enable agency teams to envision a complete Artemis mission to the lunar surface. Different elements can be added or removed to create a wide variety of scenarios. The simulation can run automatically with predetermined settings or be responsive to real-time and randomized changes. Participants can operate the team’s video walls, mock-up mission control console, virtual reality platforms, and lander piloting facility to interact together within the chosen Artemis mission scenario.

A woman wearing a black skirt and tank top stands in front of a video wall playing a simulation of a rover on the lunar surface.
Paige Whittington standing in front of the Video Wall used for human-in-the-loop simulations located inside the Systems Engineering Simulator facility at NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
Image courtesy of Paige Whittington

“I am very proud to know that the simulations I help develop have impacted some of the decisions being made by NASA’s architecture teams,” she said.

She is excited to take on a new responsibility, as well. Whittington recently became project manager of the JSC Engineering Orbital Dynamics software package. Also known as JEOD, this open-source tool was created by NASA to model spacecraft trajectories, such as proposed flight paths for a lunar lander. JEOD calculates gravitational and other environmental forces acting on spacecraft to simulate the position and orientation of those vehicles over time, whether they are orbiting a cosmic body or traveling between planets.

Whittington’s family moved frequently during her childhood, calling five different states home as she grew up. Their time in Florida would have a life-long impact.

“My parents drove me and my sister across the state to visit NASA’s Kennedy Space Center. It was mesmerizing, awe-inspiring, and seemingly a whole different world from where my 8-year-old self thought I was living,” she said. Her love of space never waned, and a high school physics teacher encouraged her to study aerospace engineering in college. “That was the turning point when I realized space exploration didn’t have to stay in my dreams – it was a career field I could actually work in.”

Whittington took her teacher’s advice, earning a bachelor’s degree in aerospace engineering from the University of Texas at Austin. She also completed two internships at Johnson through the Universities Space Research Association and interned with a NASA contractor after graduation.  While pursuing a master’s degree in Aeronautics and Astronautics at Purdue, Whittington was accepted to NASA’s Pathways Program and did two rotations with the Simulation and Graphics Branch before joining the team as a full-time employee in June 2022.

A woman in casual clothes poses with a cardboard cutout of an instagram photo frame.
Paige Whittington celebrating the launch of Artemis I at Johnson Space Center in 2022.
Image courtesy of Paige Whittington

Whittington has learned several key lessons during her five years with NASA, including the essential part open, regular communication plays in understanding an individual’s or team’s core needs and limitations. She also stressed the importance of adaptability.

“The path that you planned for may not be the path you end up choosing. But that planning enabled you to be who you are now and to make different choices,” she said. “I did not anticipate working in simulations when I started my aerospace engineering degree, but I took the opportunity when it was presented, and I am so happy that I did.”

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Q. What do music ensembles and human spaceflight have in common?
A. They both require harmonization of different elements to create an inspiring opus.

Q. How does Paige Whittington’s experience as a principal flutist for Purdue University’s Wind Ensemble relate to her current role at NASA?
A. She helped fellow flutists play beautiful music together, which is similar to how she strives for cross-team harmony in her current role as a space exploration simulation architect.

Q. What is Paige Whittington’s role within the NASA Exploration Systems Simulations (NExSyS) team?
A. She works with lunar and Mars architecture teams to assess current and potential future elements of vehicle design, logistics, and planning.

Q. What is the Artemis Distributed Simulation, and what does it do?
A. It brings together individual simulations such as rovers, landers, and habitats to enable agency teams to envision a complete Artemis mission to the lunar surface.

Q. How can participants interact with the simulation?
A. They can operate the team’s video walls, mock-up mission control console, virtual reality platforms, and lander piloting facility to interact within the chosen Artemis mission scenario.

Q. What is Paige Whittington’s new responsibility at NASA?
A. She recently became project manager of the JSC Engineering Orbital Dynamics software package, also known as JEOD.

Q. How did Paige Whittington’s childhood experiences influence her interest in space exploration?
A. Her family moved frequently during her childhood, and a visit to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center had a lasting impact on her love of space.

Q. What advice did Paige Whittington’s high school physics teacher give her that helped her pursue a career in aerospace engineering?
A. The teacher encouraged her to study aerospace engineering, which was the turning point for her realizing that space exploration didn’t have to be just a dream, but a career field she could work in.

Q. How has Paige Whittington learned key lessons during her five years with NASA?
A. She has learned the importance of open and regular communication, as well as adaptability.

Q. What is the JEOD software package, and what does it do?
A. It is an open-source tool that models spacecraft trajectories, such as proposed flight paths for a lunar lander, and calculates gravitational and other environmental forces acting on spacecraft.