ARC was founded on December 20, 1939 as the second laboratory of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), and moved to NASA in 1958. The Sunnyvale site at Moffett Field was selected in October 1939 by the Charles Lindbergh Committee established by an act of the U.S. Congress in August 1939. The Ames Aeronautical Laboratory (now the Ames Research Center) was named after Joseph Ames, the president of Johns Hopkins University.
In September of 2003, NASA Ames Research Center took a bold step towards increasing the science output, safety, and effectiveness of NASA's missions through the infusion of new technologies and scientific techniques. A contract valued at more than $330 million was awarded to the University of California (UC) to establish and operate a University Affiliated Research System (UARC). The University of California, Santa Cruz manages the UARC contract.
The UARC breaks down traditional institutional barriers to facilitate collaboration on mission-driven research that is on NASA's critical path, thus providing Ames with additional research capabilities. In particular, the UARC's educational mission will enable students and university researchers to work side-by-side with Ames researchers on mission critical problems to benefit the Agency and the nation.
External link
Ames Research Center web site (http://www.arc.nasa.gov)
University Affiliated Research Center web site (http://uarc.arc.nasa.gov)
The links below are whole books online; scroll down on their title pages to see the "table of contents" links.
The involvement of Ames in SETI stemmed from John Billingham, head of the center's Biotechnology Division, who in 1970 convinced Ames Director Hans Mark that a small-scale study of the problems of interstellar communication was justified.
Eventually, a less ambitious scheme was developed jointly by Ames and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory known as the High Resolution Microwave Survey, the targeted portion of which was the responsibility of Ames.
Recently, researchers at Ames created cell-like bubbles in a laboratory simulation of an interstellar molecular cloud (see life, origin) and reported finding evidence of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in space.