From Suriname to Space: Rohit Goeptar Shares His Journey to NASA – NASA

From Suriname to Space: Rohit Goeptar Shares His Journey to NASA – NASA


Rohit Goeptar was born into a poor family in Suriname, South America,┬аthe kind where both parents work three jobs and they still can only provide food and shelter for their family. At around age six, his family moved to California to start a new life. Only two years later, he moved back to South America with his father while his mother stayed in the┬аUnited States┬аand remarried. When he was 13,┬аhe became a U.S. citizen and he and his brothers┬аreturned to live with their mother in California.┬а

At 19, Goeptar joined the┬аU.S.┬аMarine┬аCorps┬аwhere he spent six years as a technical operator. During one deployment to the Philippines,┬аGoeptar┬аhelped set up communication┬аsystems┬аfor individuals┬аwho┬аneeded┬аto contact their loved ones after a typhoon ripped through entire towns.┬а┬а

тАЬI was lost, the Marine Corps gave me an opportunity,тАЭ Goeptar recalled.┬а┬а

While the Marines┬аtaught┬аhim useful skills, his life had not been the easiest. He lost not one, but two, fathers to suicide, and a short first marriage ended┬аwith┬аhim┬аbeing unhoused on the streets of Kissimmee, Florida,┬аfor six months. But Goeptar eventually found his way.┬а┬а┬а

As with most underdog stories, there was another person in the shadows┬аbehind his rise to success.┬а┬а

тАЬYour brain works in mysterious ways,тАЭ his now wife told him a short while after they met. She then filled out college applications for him,┬аand he eventually applied to NASAтАЩs Kennedy Space Center in Florida.┬а┬а

While raising three kids, going to school full-time pursuing a computer engineering and electrical engineering degree simultaneously, Goeptar got the call that changed his life.┬а

тАЬIn spring 2025, I was driving to pick my son up from school when a gentleman from Kennedy calls, telling me heтАЩs seen my resume and do I have time for a quick interview,тАЭ Goeptar recounted.┬а

He pulled on the side of the road and took part in an impromptu job interview.┬а

Two weeks later, he had an in-person interview with others from Kennedy and two weeks after that, he had a contractor badge at AmericaтАЩs premier spaceport.┬а┬а

After starting as an intern under the┬аExpendable Launch Vehicle Integrated Support, or ELVIS, contract, then moving to part-time until he graduated from the University of Central Florida┬а(UCF)┬аin Orlando, then full-time at the beginning of┬а2026,┬аGoeptar┬аwas one of┬аthe┬аELVIS contractors who applied and were┬аpicked up to become civil servants┬аrecently.┬а

Now an employee of NASAтАЩs Launch Services Program,┬аGoeptar┬аworks with electromagnetic interference, electromagnetic compatibility, and radio frequency. It is his job throughout the entirety of the mission to analyze and ensure avionic boxes or anything electrically powered┬аdoesnтАЩt┬аinterfere with any other systems. He also ensures independent systems are compatible when brought together. And finally, he conducts model┬аradio frequency┬аlink analysis for different┬аrockets┬аand┬аscience demonstrations┬аpayloads. These may belong┬аto┬аNASA or commercial┬аpartners, and he┬аis responsible for┬аensuring┬аuninterrupted┬аcommunication with the ground. In his┬аshort time┬аat Kennedy,┬аGoeptar┬аhas worked on Sentinel-6B, JPSS-4┬а(Joint Polar Satellite System), and IMAP┬а(Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe)┬аmissions.┬а┬а

And as far as his wifeтАЩs assessment that his brain works differently, he proved that within a year at Kennedy when he noticed an┬аanalytical issue his team┬аwasnтАЩt┬аtracking. Once a rocket launches, it does a pitch, yaw, and roll. The analysis the team had been conducting┬аdidnтАЩt┬аaccount for this movement, which meant it┬аwasnтАЩt┬аas┬аaccurate┬аas it could be. He presented his solution to the┬аteam lead,┬аand it now enables┬аNASA┬аdata and partner data to be much more┬аin sync.┬а

тАЬThere is no greater feeling, being able to serve.┬аItтАЩs┬аmore than serving the public,┬аitтАЩs┬аserving our country.┬аItтАЩs┬аserving the future of our country,тАЭ┬аGoeptar┬аsaid with tears brimming in his eyes. тАЬBeing able to give back to that same government that gave me an opportunity to be where┬аIтАЩm┬аat today.┬аThereтАЩs┬аno greater feeling than that.тАЭ┬а

Meanwhile, GoeptarтАЩs 11-year-old takes most of the credit for his landing at┬аthe space center,┬аa NASA enthusiast, his son believes he spoke it into existence.┬а

тАЬOne day he wants to become an astronaut,тАЭ┬аGoeptar┬аsaid┬аwith joy on his face.┬атАЬAnd I told him I will guide him until the day that I die.┬аMaybe my┬аlast mission could be the one my son flies on.┬аIтАЩm┬аnot going to stop until that day happens.тАЭ┬а

RohitтАЩs positive streak continues as he recently was accepted into electrical engineering masterтАЩs programs at both Johns Hopkins University, and UCF.тАп┬а

Learn more about NASAтАЩs missions online:┬а

https://www.nasa.gov┬а



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