Requirements to Become an Astronaut for Nasa
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The Goddard Memorial Mrs
March 2004 Issue 3 Vol 1 NASA Remembers Columbia Crew with Dedications By Dewayne Washington Photo by Bill Ingalls/NASA On February 2, Remembering Columbia ... Page 1 NASA paused to Women History ................ Page 2 commemorate and honor lives lost in the Columbia Supporters ........ Page 3 continuing efforts of space exploration. A What Turns Hurricanes Into memorial to the Monsters .......................... Page 4 fallen heroes of Can We Talk? ................... Page 4 Space Shuttle Columbia was Why Go? ......................... Page 5 unveiled during a ceremony early in the Explorer Schools Visits ..... Page 7 day at Arlington Blind Can Reach ............... Page 8 National Cemetery. Family members of The Goddard Memorial Mrs. Sandy Anderson, wife of Columbia astronaut Michael Anderson, the STS-107crew Symposium ...................... Page 9 looks at the memorial along with astronauts Steve Robinson (right) were the first to see and Carlos Noriega (left). another permanent Goddard in the News ....... Page 9 marker of the dangers of space flight. The new memorial is just a few feet from one Black History Activities .. Page 10 honoring the crew of Space Shuttle Challenger, lost on January 28, 1986. Employee Spotlight ........ Page 11 In his remarks, Administrator O’Keefe stated that future visitors to the site will learn that these space heroes came from all parts of the United States and from the lands Goddard Meet CFC Goal .. Page 12 of India and Israel. “They were pilots, engineers and scientists, all motivated by a fire Gay/Straight Alliance ..... Page 12 within, a passionate eternal flame within each of their souls that compelled them to live lives of distinction, and to bring the heavens ever closer to our grasp.” Movie Days .................... -
Roundup Fall 2015
National Aeronautics and Space Administration Roundup LYNDON B. JOHNSON SPACE CENTER Fall | 2015 Global (and cosmic) expansion Expansión global (y cósmica) In this edition… Guest Column 3 ISS Science Corner 4 Veteran explorers slated for future commercial crew flights 5 All aboard the education I’M WRITING THIS COLUMN having only been on the job for about two station! weeks, so I’m still learning the duties of a deputy director. While I have 6 White House lands at the been to the ninth floor of Building 1 many times, it is interesting how I house of human spaceflight have begun to see the center differently as I take on this new role. to praise our Commitment to I was the Orion Program manager for nearly eight years. During that Action for Hispanic education time, I experienced many transitions in NASA leadership and policy. 8 ‘Leaf’ it to NASA to grow Some of these were difficult for the team to weather, but they met the lettuce on space station challenge. I believe these experiences taught me how to anticipate, adapt and lead a team through change. It is my hope that these 9 It’s complicated: New Pluto experiences will provide me the insight to help Ellen lead the center images from NASA’s New into NASA’s next chapters of human spaceflight. Horizons offer many surprises I know that the other programs and directorates at JSC are faced 10 Meet Delene Sedillo, with their own specific, dynamic environments. In the coming weeks, NASA/PHOTO Associate Director, Office of I’ll be taking some time to get an understanding of the strategies and Mark Geyer Procurement challenges involving all of the organizations here at JSC. -
The Role and Training of NASA Astronauts in the Post-Shuttle Era
The Role and Training of NASA Astronauts in the Post-Shuttle Era Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board ∙ Air Force Studies Board ∙ Division on Engineering & Physical Sciences ∙ September 2011 As the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) retires the Space Shuttle and shifts involvement in International Space Station (ISS) operations, changes in the role and requirements of NASA’s Astronaut Corps will take place. At the request of NASA, the National Research Council (NRC) addressed three main questions about these changes: What should be the role and size of Johnson Space Center’s (JSC) Flight Crew Operations Directorate (FCOD); what will be the requirements of astronaut training facilities; and is the Astronaut Corps’ fleet of training aircraft a cost-effective means of preparing astronauts for NASA’s spaceflight program? This report presents an assessment of several issues driven by these questions. This report does not address explicitly the future of human spaceflight. Background Corps—defined in this report as the number he United States has been launching as- of astronauts qualified to fly into space. As Ttronauts into space for more than five of May 2011, the Astronaut Corps consist- decades and, for a majority of those years, ed of 61 people, compared with a peak size astronauts have been selected and trained of nearly 150 people in 2000. NASA uses a through NASA’s Astronaut Corps. Since its model for projecting minimum ISS manifest inception in 1959, the Astronaut Corps— requirements. Using the model on the next which is based at the Lyndon B. Johnson page, NASA has projected that the Astronaut Space Center (JSC) in Houston, Texas—has Corps will need a minimum of 55-60 astro- experienced periodic fluctuations in size and nauts to meet ISS crew requirements through training emphasis based on various program 2016. -
LSAH Newsletter
National Aeronautics and Space Administration THE LIFETIME SURVEILLANCE OF ASTRONAUT HEALTH Newsletter Volume 25, Issue 1 Editor’s Note: We hope you are all doing well during this unprecedented time in our history. This edition of the LSAH Newsletter looks at the most recent updates to the TREAT Astronauts Act, as well as how to make a behavior- al telehealth appointment with the JSC Clinic during the COVID-19 pandemic. We dive into the history of LSAH in the last three decades, and peer into the future of the Artemis program while remembering the great strides taken from the Apollo era. A Message from the JSC Clinic! As a reminder, your routine medical evaluation now includes a dedicated behavioral health session with our Clinical Neuropsychologist, Dr. Carmen Pulido. The initial session will take approximately 1.5 hours, and will include a review of your devel- opmental, occupational, and medical history. In response to COVID-19 and the current limitations Nov. 15, 2019 - NASA astronaut Andrew Morgan waves as on travel, we have this service available virtually! he is photographed during the first spacewalk to repair the For a behavioral telehealth appointment with Dr. Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, a cosmic particle detector on Pulido, please contact the JSC Flight Medicine the International Space Station. Clinic at 281-483- 7999 during normal business hours. Making a behavioral telehealth appointment LSAH: Looking Back, Moving Forward will not affect your ability to visit the JSC Clinic Mary Wear, Ph.D. and Jacqueline Charvat, Ph.D. for your routine physical and other health appoint- The National Aeronautics and Space Act of 1958 ments. -
Nhhpc Workshop 2014 Bios
Innovation through Co-development: Engaging Partners Workshop and Networking Event Biographies Keynote Speaker Biographies ……………………………………………. p 02 Panelist and Breakout Moderator Biographies …………………………. p 07 Partner Biographies ……………………………………………………….. p 12 1 Innovation through Co-development: Engaging Partners Workshop and Networking Event Keynote Biographies Mr. Gene Kranz As the leader of the “Tiger Team” of flight directors who brought the Apollo 13 spaceship safely back to Earth on April 17, 1970, Gene Kranz demonstrated extraordinary courage and heroism. The hit film, Apollo 13, chronicles Kranz’s struggle to devise the plan that would safely bring the ship and its crew of three astronauts home after its oxygen system failed. Actor Ed Harris portrays Kranz in the film, which was directed by Ron Howard. Kranz retired from NASA in 1994 after 37 years of federal service, and is currently a consultant and speaker. “Failure is not an option,” the motto that carried him through the Apollo 13 crisis, is a major theme of his motivational message. After receiving his B.S. degree in aeronautical engineering from Parks College of St. Louis University in 1954, Kranz was commissioned in the U.S. Air Force, and flew high performance jet fighter aircraft, including the F-80, F-86, and F-100. In 1958, he worked as a flight-test engineer for McDonnell Aircraft, developing the Quail Decoy Missile for B-52 and B-47 aircraft. Kranz joined the NASA Space Task Group at Langley, Virginia, in 1960, and was assigned the position of assistant flight director for Project Mercury. He assumed flight director duties for all Project Gemini Missions, and was branch chief for Flight Control Operations. -
22–25 Oct. GSA 2017 Annual Meeting & Exposition
22–25 Oct. GSA 2017 Annual Meeting & Exposition JULY 2017 | VOL. 27, NO. 7 NO. 27, | VOL. 2017 JULY A PUBLICATION OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA® JULY 2017 | VOLUME 27, NUMBER 7 SCIENCE 4 Extracting Bulk Rock Properties from Microscale Measurements: Subsampling and Analytical Guidelines M.C. McCanta, M.D. Dyar, and P.A. Dobosh GSA TODAY (ISSN 1052-5173 USPS 0456-530) prints news Cover: Mount Holyoke College astronomy students field-testing a and information for more than 26,000 GSA member readers and subscribing libraries, with 11 monthly issues (March/ Raman BRAVO spectrometer for field mineral identification, examin- April is a combined issue). GSA TODAY is published by The ing pegmatite minerals crosscutting a slightly foliated hornblende Geological Society of America® Inc. (GSA) with offices at quartz monzodiorite and narrow aplite dikes exposed in the spillway 3300 Penrose Place, Boulder, Colorado, USA, and a mail- of the Quabbin Reservoir. All three units are part of the Devonian ing address of P.O. Box 9140, Boulder, CO 80301-9140, USA. GSA provides this and other forums for the presentation Belchertown igneous complex in central Massachusetts, USA. of diverse opinions and positions by scientists worldwide, See related article, p. 4–9. regardless of race, citizenship, gender, sexual orientation, religion, or political viewpoint. Opinions presented in this publication do not reflect official positions of the Society. © 2017 The Geological Society of America Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright not claimed on content prepared GSA 2017 Annual Meeting & Exposition wholly by U.S. government employees within the scope of their employment. Individual scientists are hereby granted 11 Abstracts Deadline permission, without fees or request to GSA, to use a single figure, table, and/or brief paragraph of text in subsequent 12 Education, Careers, and Mentoring work and to make/print unlimited copies of items in GSA TODAY for noncommercial use in classrooms to further 13 Feed Your Brain—Lunchtime Enlightenment education and science. -
Perspectives on the Shuttle Program 1 Space Exploration and the Future
National Aeronautics and Space Administration News Farewell from all your NASA colleagues & NASA HISTORY PROGRAM OFFICE Notes Office of Communications Volume 28, Number 4 Fourth Quarter 2011 From Perspectives on the the Chief Shuttle Program Historian For this special issue, our contributors focused on their Centers’ roles With the end of the during the Space Shuttle Program. These varying articles examine the Space Shuttle flights early beginnings as well as the end of this epic era and also illustrate the in 2011, we thought diversity of work at the NASA Centers. we’d try something new for News and Ames Research Center (ARC) Notes this time—a thematic approach focus- ing on the Shuttle Program. In addition The NASA Ames community reflected upon its many contributions to the to much of our usual content, you’ll find Space Shuttle Program at a Center-wide Shuttle Family Reunion on 9 articles inside from the Centers with perspec- August 2011. The highlight of the day was an award ceremony, attended tives on their roles in the Shuttle Program and by Ames staff and retirees, introduced by Jack Boyd, and with a program its conclusion, information on historic pres- prepared by Sheila Johnson and Glenn Bugos. Jim Arnold spoke on his ervation efforts related to the Shuttle, some work in thermal protection systems, John Allmen on Ames’s key work in great Shuttle-related pictures, and even the Return to Flight effort, Walt Brooks on the Columbia supercomputer a cartoon. to support computational fluid dynamics, Tom Alderete on pilot familiar- ization and cockpit simulation in the Vertical Motion Simulator, and Ken For the cartoon, we have to thank Souza on how Ames biologists used the Shuttle to advance fundamental Tim Rickard, creator of “Brewster Rockit: space life science. -
2015-2016 Academic Year
2015–2016 The Bulletin BULLETIN OF TUFTS UNIVERSITY http://uss.tufts.edu/bulletin ARTS, SCIENCES, AND ENGINEERING 2015–2016 BULLETIN Academic Year 2015–2016 SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES College of Liberal Arts Graduate School of Arts and Sciences SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING 7/24/15 9:21 PM Through this bulletin, announcement is made of the general rules, regulations, fees, and schedules in effect as of the date of publication. This bulletin is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a contract between the university and any applicant, student, or other party. The university reserves its right to make changes, without notice, in any course offerings, requirements, policies, regulations, dates, and financial or other information contained in this bulletin. Published by the Trustees of Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts 02155. Printed in the USA. TUFTS UNIVERSITY 2015 43995cvr.indd 2 The Bulletin BULLETIN OF TUFTS UNIVERSITY | 2015–2016 School of Arts and Sciences COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ARTS AND SCIENCES School of Engineering 43995txt001-082.indd 1 7/24/15 9:27 PM 43995txt001-082.indd 2 7/24/15 9:27 PM Presidents of Tufts University ............................... 4 Contents About Tufts University ......................................... 4 Financial Information Expenses and Policies ...................................... 6 Financial Aid ................................................... 8 School of Arts and Sciences Mission Statement ........................................ 11 College of Liberal Arts -
Remarks for Administrator Bolden First Flight
REMARKS FOR ADMINISTRATOR BOLDEN FIRST FLIGHT SOCIETY 109TH CELEBRATION OF POWERED FLIGHT - RECOGNIZING THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF MARINE CORPS AVIATION Dec. 17, 2012 Thank you for this special honor. I am so proud to be inducted into the Paul E. Garber First Flight Shrine. It's an honor to be recognized at a monument named for an aviation pioneer who has been responsible for so much of the history of my field being preserved. Thanks to Mr. Garber, the amazing flying machines that continually inspire new generations to take to the sky, or even to space, will be seen and appreciated for generations. 1 It's quite an honor to be in the company of Alan Shepard and John Glenn; Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins; the Tuskegee Airmen, Bruce McCandless, and so many others who have enlarged this shrine with their accomplishments and inspiration. Ever since NASA got its roadmap forward with the NASA Authorization Act of 2010, we've been moving toward the missions of tomorrow and the capabilities we'll need to visit new places, launch cutting edge science missions, and help develop the next generation of aviation and space systems from which we'll all benefit. A lot of that work will be with the help of people who gained valuable skills through their military service and I'm happy to honor that legacy today as we celebrate the 100th anniversary of Marine aviation. 2 NASA and the military have a long and storied history. Our earliest astronauts came from the military because we wanted that test pilot experience and the willingness to face dangerous situations. -
Walking the High Ground: the Manned Orbiting Laboratory And
Walking the High Ground: The Manned Orbiting Laboratory and the Age of the Air Force Astronauts by Will Holsclaw Department of History Defense Date: April 9, 2018 Thesis Advisor: Andrew DeRoche, Department of History Thesis Committee: Matthew Gerber, Department of History Allison Anderson, Department of Aerospace Engineering 2 i Abstract This thesis is an examination of the U.S. Air Force’s cancelled – and heretofore substantially classified – Manned Orbiting Laboratory (MOL) space program of the 1960s, situating it in the broader context of military and civilian space policy from the dawn of the Space Age in the 1950s to the aftermath of the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster. Several hundred documents related to the MOL have recently been declassified by the National Reconnaissance Office, and these permit historians a better understanding of the origins of the program and its impact. By studying this new windfall of primary source material and linking it with more familiar and visible episodes of space history, this thesis aims to reevaluate not only the MOL program itself but the dynamic relationship between America’s purportedly bifurcated civilian and military space programs. Many actors in Cold War space policy, some well-known and some less well- known, participated in the secretive program and used it as a tool for intertwining the interests of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) with the Air Force and reshaping national space policy. Their actions would lead, for a time, to an unprecedented militarization of NASA by the Department of Defense which would prove to be to the benefit of neither party. -
EARTH and SPACE SCIENCES 2012 Newsletter
EARTH AND SPACE SCIENCES 2012 Newsletter 2012_Newsletter_Draft1.indd 1 12/6/12 7:18 PM FROM THE DESK OF THE CHAIR: In this issue: Greetings from the Chair—2 Warm greetings from Westwood to all of you in the extended ESS family! We hope that this newsletter finds you and your loved ones well as 2012 draws to a close, and we assume that dawn will arrive on December 22 with ESS Updates—3 nothing more dramatic than the rollover to a new Mayan Long Count. Hello, my name is Kevin McKeegan, and in another cosmically-unimportant but locally-notable event, I’ve assumed duties as Chair of the department, Faculty Updates— 5 taking over from Craig Manning in July. I speak for everyone in ESS as I sincerely thank Craig for four years of devoted leadership that has helped the department thrive even in the face of difficult circumstances in higher Students—7 education and in the broader economy. I am particularly grateful to Craig for his stewardship of resources and his focus on long-term goals that have enabled me to take the rudder of a ship that is under full sail toward ESS Events—9 new adventures and discoveries. We’re excited to bring to you this update on some recent activities in and beyond the halls of ESS and we hope that you enjoy this annual newsletter and that you stay in touch via our 2012 Commencement —12 website (www.ess.ucla.edu/alumni/). Donors —13 My term as Chair started with an exciting adventure, the fruits of which you can see on the cover. -
Melnick, Bruce E
Biographical Data Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas 77058 National Aeronautics and Space Administration BRUCE E. MELNICK NASA ASTRONAUT (FORMER) PERSONAL DATA: Born in 1949. He resides in Inglis, Florida. EDUCATION: Melnick received a master’s degree in aeronautical systems from the University of West Florida and a bachelor’s degree in engineering with honors from the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. He was awarded an honorary doctorate of science degree from the University of West Florida on 28 April 2001. EXPERIENCE: During his 20-year career with the U.S. Coast Guard, Melnick’s assignments included serving as operations officer and chief test pilot at the Coast Guard Aircraft Program Office in Grand Prairie, Texas. In that capacity, he conducted most of the developmental and all of the acceptance test flights for the HH-65 helicopter, including sea trials, and wrote the HH-65 flight manual. During his Coast Guard service, Melnick received numerous awards, including two Department of Defense Distinguished Service Medals, two Distinguished Flying Crosses and the Secretary of Transportation Heroism Award. In 1992, he received the U.S. Coast Guard Academy Distinguished Alumni Award. He logged over 5,000 hours flying time, predominantly in the H-3, H-52, H-65, and T-38 aircraft. Selected by NASA in June 1987, Melnick became an astronaut in August 1988, qualified for flight assignment as a mission specialist. Subsequent technical assignments included: Astronaut Support Personnel (ASP) team at the Kennedy Space Center assigned to prepare Shuttle Orbiter cockpits and middecks prior to each flight; represented the Astronaut Office in the assembly and checkout of the new Space Shuttle Orbiter "Endeavour" (OV-105) at the contractor facilities in California; served as head of the flight software verification team in the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL).