Andrew Sydney Withiel Thomas
Andew Thomas | |
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Andrew Thomas | |
Astronaut NASA | |
Státní příslušnost | USA , Austrálie |
Datum narození | 18. prosince 1951 (71 let) |
Místo narození | Adelaide , Austrálie |
Čas ve vesmíru | 177 dní, 9 hodin a 14 minut |
Kosmonaut od | 1992 |
Mise | STS-77, STS-89, STS-91, STS-102, STS-114 |
Znaky misí | |
Některá data mohou pocházet z datové položky. |
Andrew Sydney Withiel Thomas (* 18. prosince 1951 v Adelaide, Jižní Austrálie) je australsko-americký strojní inženýr a kosmonaut. Ve vesmíru byl čtyřikrát, na orbitální stanici Mir strávil 140 dní.
Život
Studium a zaměstnání
Vysokoškolské studium absolvoval v rodném městě na University of Adelaide, kde v roce 1975 získal doktorát.
Zaměstnání získal v roce 1977 u společnosti Lockheed Corporation v (USA). V roce 1989 nastoupil k Jet Propulsion Laboratory v Pasadeně, stát Kalifornie, kde zůstal tři roky.
V letech 1992 až 1993 absolvoval výcvik budoucích kosmonautů v Houstonu, poté byl zařazen do tamní jednotky astronautů NASA.
Oženil se, jeho manželkou se stala astronautka Shannon Walkerová (*1965). Má přezdívku Andy.
Lety do vesmíru
Na oběžnou dráhu se v raketoplánu dostal čtyřikrát ve funkci letového specialisty, pracoval na orbitálních stanicích Mir i ISS, strávil ve vesmíru celkem 177 dní, 9 hodin a 14 minut. Vystoupil jednou do volného vesmíru (EVA), strávil zde 6 hodin a 21 minut. Byl 346 člověkem ve vesmíru.
- STS-77 Endeavour (19. květen 1996 – 29. květen 1996)
- Cesta na Mir
- Zpátky z orbitální stanice Mir na Zem
- STS-102 Discovery ( 8. března 2001 – 21. března 2001)
- STS-114 Discovery (26. července 2005 – 9. srpna 2005)
Odkazy
Externí odkazy
- Obrázky, zvuky či videa k tématu Andrew Sydney Withiel Thomas na Wikimedia Commons
- Na webu Space
- Na webu MEK-Kosmo
Média použitá na této stránce
* In the STS-89 crew insignia, the link between the United States and Russia is symbolically represented by the Space Shuttle Endeavour and Russia's Mir Space Station orbiting above the Bering Strait between Siberia and Alaska. The success of the joint United States-Russian missions is depicted by the Space Shuttle and Mir colored by the rising sun in the background.
- A shadowed representation of the International Space Station (ISS) rising with the sun represents the future program for which the Shuttle-Mir missions are prototypes. The inside rim of the insignia describes the outline of the number eight representing STS-89 as the eighth Shuttle/Mir docking mission.
- The nine stars represent the nine joint missions to be flown of the program and when combined with the number eight in the rim, reflect the mission number. The nine stars also symbolize the children of the crew members who will be the future beneficiaries of the joint development work of the space programs of the two countries.
- Along the rim are the crew members' names with David A. Wolf's name on the left and Andrew S. W. Thomas' name on the right, the returning and upgoing cosmonaut guest researcher crew members. In between and at the bottom is the name of Salizan S. Sharipov, payload specialist representing Russian Space Agency (RSA), in Cyrillic alphabet.
- The other crew members are Terrence W. Wilcutt, commander; Joe F. Edwards, Jr., pilot; and mission specialists Michael P. Anderson, Bonnie J. Dunbar, and James F. Reilly. The red, white and blue of the rim reflect the colors of the American and Russian flags which are also represented in the rim on either side of the joined spacecraft.
The STS-77 crew patch displays the Shuttle Endeavour in the lower left and its reflection within the tripod and concave parabolic mirror of the SPARTAN Inflatable Antenna Experiment (IAE). The center leg of the tripod also delineates the top of the Spacehab's shape, the rest of which is outlined in gold just inside the red perimeter. The Spacehab was carried in the payload bay and housed the Commercial Float Zone Furnace (CFZF). Also depicted within the confines of the IAE mirror are the mission's rendezvous operations with the Passive Aerodynamically-Stabilized Magnetically-Damped satellite (PAM/STU) appears as a bright six-pointed star-like reflection of the sun on the edge of the mirror with Endeavour in position to track it. The sunlight on the mirror's edge, which also appears as an orbital sunset, is located over Goddard Space Flight Center, the development facility for the SPARTAN/IAE and Technology Experiments Advancing Missions in Space (TEAMS) experiments. The reflection of the Earth is oriented to show the individual countries of the crew as well as the ocean which Captain Cook explored in the original Endeavour. The mission number 77 is featured as twin stylized chevrons and an orbiting satellite as adapted from NASA's logo. The stars at the top are arranged as seen in the northern sky in the vicinity of the constellation Ursa Minor. The field of 11 stars represents both the TEAMS cluster of experiments (the four antennae of GPS Attitude and Navigation Experiment (GANE), the single canister of Liquid Metal Thermal Experiment (LMTE), the three canisters of Vented Tank Resupply Experiment (VTRE), and the three canisters of PAM/STU) and the 11th flight of Endeavour. The constellation at the right shows the fourth flight of Spacelab Experiments.
Emblem of Nasa's STS-114 mission.
- The STS-114 patch design signifies the return of the Space Shuttle to flight and honors the memory of the STS-107 Columbia crew. The blue Shuttle rising above Earth’s horizon includes the Columba constellation of seven stars, echoing the STS-107 patch and commemorating the seven members of that mission. The crew of STS-114 will carry the memory of their friends on Columbia and the legacy of their mission back into Earth orbit. The dominant design element of the STS-114 patch is the planet Earth, which represents the unity and dedication of the many people whose efforts allow the Shuttle to safely return to flight. Against the background of the Earth at night, the blue orbit represents the International Space Station (ISS), with the EVA crewmembers named on the orbit. The red sun on the orbit signifies the contributions of the Japanese Space Agency to the mission and to the ISS program. The multi-colored Shuttle plume represents the broad spectrum of challenges for this mission, including Shuttle inspection and repair experiments, and International Space Station re-supply and repair.
The STS-102 crew insignia depicts the International Space Station as it looked when Space Shuttle Discovery was docked. Visible elements include the P6 and Z1 trusses, solar arrays from the Russian segment, 2 Pressurized Mating Adapters, and the Multi Purpose Logistics Module that was temporarily attached to the underside of the Unity Node. The numbers "102" represent the mission tail number. The red, white, and blue ribbons surrounding the space station represent that this is a crew rotation flight. The colors represent the nationalities of the crewmembers (Russian and American). Underneath the ribbons are the flags of the three nations who are the major contributors to the mission (from left to right: Russia, United States, Italy). The names of the 4 permanent crewmembers are displayed in gold around the top of the emblem. Attached to the bottom are six names depicting the six rotating crewmembers (Expedition 2 on top and Expedition 1 on bottom).
This is the crew patch for the STS-91 mission – the ninth flight of the Shuttle-Mir Phase One docking missions. The crew will bring back Andrew S. W. Thomas, the last long-duration American crew member flown on the Russian Space Station Mir. This mission marks the end of the Shuttle-Mir Phase One Program and will open the way for Phase Two: construction of the International Space Station (ISS).
The crew patch depicts the rendezvous of the Space Shuttle Discovery with the Space Station Mir. The flags of the United States and Russia are displayed at the top of the patch and both countries are visible on the Earth behind the two spacecraft. The names of the American crew members surround the insignia on the outer areas, with the name of cosmonaut Valeriy Ryumin in Cyrillic at the lower right.