Judith Love Cohen

Engineer

Birthday August 16, 1933

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Brooklyn, New York, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2016-7-25, Culver City, California, U.S. (82 years old)

Nationality United States

#5649 Most Popular

1933

Judith Love Cohen (August 16, 1933 – July 25, 2016) was an American aerospace engineer.

She was an electrical engineer on the Minuteman missile, the science ground station for the Hubble Space Telescope, the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite, and the Apollo Space Program.

In particular, her work on the Abort-Guidance System is credited with helping save Apollo 13.

1950

In the mid-1950s, Cohen married fellow engineer Bernard Siegel, whom she had met while she was a freshman in engineering school at Brooklyn College in Brooklyn, New York.

They had three children: engineer/scientist Neil Siegel, Howard Siegel, and Rachel Siegel.

1952

Cohen's engineering career began in 1952, when she worked as a junior engineer at North American Aviation.

1957

She received both her bachelor's and master's degrees from USC Viterbi School of Engineering, in 1957 and 1962 respectively, and continued her association with the university, serving as an Astronautical Engineering Advisory board member.

After graduation from USC Viterbi School of Engineering in 1957, she went on to work at Space Technology Laboratories.

1960

The couple divorced in the mid-1960s.

In the mid-1960s, Cohen married Thomas "Tom" William Black, who converted to Judaism for her.

1969

In 1969, they had a son, actor and musician Jack Black.

In a memorial tribute, her son Neil notes that she was troubleshooting problems with schematics on the day she went into labor, called her boss to let him know she had fixed the problem and then delivered Jack.

1970

The couple divorced in the late 1970s.

1980

In the early 1980s, Cohen married David A. Katz.

1982

In 1982, she became a graduate of the UCLA Engineering Executive Program.

1990

She stayed with the company until her retirement in 1990.

Her engineering work included work on the guidance computer for the Minuteman missile and the Abort-Guidance System (AGS) in the Apollo Lunar Module.

The AGS played an important role in the safe return of Apollo 13 after an oxygen tank explosion left the Service Module crippled and forced the astronauts to use the Lunar Module as a "lifeboat."

Supplies of electrical power and water on the LM were limited and the Primary Guidance and Navigation System used too much water for cooling.

As a result, after a major LM descent engine burn two hours past its closest approach to the Moon to shorten the trip home, the AGS was used for most of the return, including two mid-course corrections.

pp. III-17,32,35,40 According to her son Neil, "My mother usually considered her work on the Apollo program to be the highlight of her career. When disaster struck the Apollo 13 mission, it was the Abort-Guidance System that brought the astronauts home safely. Judy was there when the Apollo 13 astronauts paid a 'thank you' to the TRW facility in Redondo Beach."

In 1990, after retiring from practice as an engineer, she began a publishing company called Cascade Pass with her third husband, David Katz.

They published two series of books:

Cascade Pass has sold more than 100,000 of their children's books in these two series.

Cascade Pass also published a book called The Women of Apollo (written by Robyn Friend, Cohen's daughter-in-law), which features short biographies of four women who helped put the first man on the moon, Cohen among them.

1991

In 1991, Cohen's son Howard died of AIDS at the age of 36.

2002

Space Technology Laboratories eventually became TRW (acquired by Northrop Grumman in 2002).

2016

After her retirement from engineering, she founded a children's multimedia publishing company, eventually publishing more than 20 titles before her death in 2016.

She was the mother of computer scientist and engineer Neil Siegel and actor-musician Jack Black.

Cohen was born into a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, the daughter of Sarah Cohen (née Roisman) and Morris Bernard Cohen.

By fifth grade, her classmates were paying her to do their math homework.

She was often the only girl in her math classes, and decided she wanted to become a math teacher.

By age 19, she was studying engineering in college, and dancing ballet in the Metropolitan Opera Ballet company in New York.

She received a scholarship to Brooklyn College to major in math, but realized she preferred engineering.

After two years at Brooklyn College, Cohen married and moved to California, working as a junior engineer for North American Aviation, attending the

University of Southern California (USC) at night; she said that she went through both her BS and MS programs at USC without ever meeting another female engineering student.

They had been married for 35 years at the time of Cohen's death, after a short battle with cancer in 2016.