Amit Kshatriya
Acting Deputy Associate Administrator for Common Exploration Systems Development, NASA
Amit Kshatriya is the acting Deputy Associate Administrator (DAA) for the Common Exploration Systems Development Division. In this role, he directs and provides leadership and integration for the Space Launch System, Orion, and Exploration Ground Systems programs, as well as initiatives linking the agency’s Moon to Mars objectives.
Kshatriya began his career in the space program in 2003, working as a software engineer, robotics engineer, and spacecraft operator primarily focused on the robotic assembly of the International Space Station (ISS). From 2014 to 2017, he served as an ISS Flight Director, where he led global teams in the operations and execution of the space station during all phases of flight. From 2017 to 2021, he became deputy, and then acting manager, of the ISS Vehicle Office, where he was responsible for sustaining engineering, logistics, and hardware program management of the ISS vehicle enterprise. In 2021, he was assigned to NASA Headquarters in the Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate as an assistant DAA, where he was an integral part of the team that returned human-rated spacecraft to the Moon during the Artemis I mission.
Kshatriya holds a Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from the California Institute of Technology and a Master of Arts in Mathematics from The University of Texas at Austin. He was born in Brookfield, Wisconsin, but considers Katy, Texas, to be his hometown. He and his wife Alicia Bennett are the proud parents of three children, and he is also the proud son of first-generation Indian immigrants to the United States — Smt. Roma Kshatriya of Katy, Texas, and the late Shri. Ghanashyam Kshatriya.
Kshatriya has been decorated with the NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal for his actions as the lead flight director for the 50th expedition to the space station, as well as the Silver Snoopy — an award that astronauts bestow for outstanding performance contributing to flight safety — for his efforts as lead robotics officer for the Commercial Orbital Transportation Services Dragon demonstration mission to the space station.