Joseph Richard Tanner
Joseph Richard Tanner | |
---|---|
Joseph Richard Tanner | |
Astronaut NASA | |
Státní příslušnost | USA |
Datum narození | 21. ledna 1950 (72 let) |
Místo narození | Danville, Illinois |
Předchozí zaměstnání | letec |
Čas ve vesmíru | 43 dní, 13 hodin a 15 minut |
Kosmonaut od | 1992 |
Mise | STS-66, STS-82, STS-97, STS-115 |
Znaky misí | |
Kosmonaut do | 2008 |
Pozdější zaměstnání | důchodce |
Některá data mohou pocházet z datové položky. |
Joseph Richard Tanner (* 21. ledna 1950 v Danville, stát Illinois, USA), americký pilot a kosmonaut. Ve vesmíru byl čtyřikrát.
Život
Studium a zaměstnání
Absolvoval střední školu v rodném městě Danville a pak pokračoval ve studiu na University of Illinois. Ukončil jej v roce 1973. Pracoval pak jako armádní pilot, resp. instruktor létání do roku 1984, kdy se stejnou profesí odešel k NASA do Houstonu.
V letech 1992 až 1993 prodělal výcvik kosmonautů a poté byl zařazen do oddílu kosmonautů. Zde zůstal do roku 2008. Pak odešel učit na University of Colorado v Boulderu.
Oženil se, jeho manželkou se stala Martha, rozená Currie. Měl přezdívku Joe.
Lety do vesmíru
Na oběžnou dráhu se v raketoplánech dostal čtyřikrát s funkcí letový specialista a strávil ve vesmíru 43 dní, 13 hodin a 15 minut. Sedmkrát vystoupil do volného vesmíru (EVA), strávil v něm 46 hodin a 29 minut. Byl 319 člověkem ve vesmíru.
- STS-66 Atlantis (3. listopadu 1994 – 14. listopadu 1994)
- STS-82 Discovery (11. února 1997 – 21. února 1997)
- STS-97 Endeavour (1. prosinec 2000 – 11. prosinec 2000)
- STS-115 Atlantis (9. září 2006 – 21. září 2006)
Odkazy
Externí odkazy
- Obrázky, zvuky či videa k tématu Joseph Richard Tanner na Wikimedia Commons
- Web MEK-Kosmo
- Na webu Space
Média použitá na této stránce
STS-66 Mission Insignia
This is the crew insignia for STS-97, which will deliver, assemble, and activate the U.S. electrical power system on board the International Space Station (ISS). The electrical power system, which is built into a 47-foot integrated truss structure known as P6, consists of solar arrays, radiators, batteries, and electronics. P6 will be attached to the Station using the Shuttle's robotic arm in coordination with spacewalking crewmembers that will make the final connections. The spacewalkers will then prepare P6 for the subsequent deployments of the large solar arrays and radiator, which are critical steps in the activation of the electrical power system. The 120-foot solar arrays will provide the power necessary for the first ISS crews to live and work in the U.S. segment.
The crew patch depicts the Space Shuttle docked to ISS in low Earth orbit after the activation of the P6 electrical power system. Gold and silver are used to highlight the portion of ISS that will be installed by the STS-97 crew. The Sun, central to the design, is the source of energy for ISS.
This is the STS-115 insignia. The patch was designed by Graham Huber, Gigi Lui, and Peter Hui in conjunction with York University in Toronto, Canada. This mission continues the assembly of the International Space Station (ISS) with the installation of the truss segments P3 and P4. Following the installation of the segments utilizing both the shuttle and the station robotic arms, a series of three space walks will complete the final connections and prepare for the deployment of the station's second set of solar arrays. To reflect the primary mission of the flight, the patch depicts a solar panel as the main element. As the Space Shuttle Atlantis launches towards the ISS, its trail depicts the symbol of the Astronaut Office. The starburst, representing the power of the sun, rises over the Earth and shines on the solar panel. The shuttle flight number 115 is shown at the bottom of the patch, along with the ISS assembly designation 12A (the 12th American assembly mission). The blue Earth in the background reminds us of the importance of space exploration and research to all of Earth's inhabitants. The NASA insignia design for shuttle flights is reserved for use by the astronauts and for other official use as the NASA Administrator may authorize. Public availability has been approved only in the forms of illustrations by the various news media. When and if there is any change in this policy, which is not anticipated, the change will be publicly announced.
STS-82 Mission Insignia
- STS-82 is the second mission to service the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). The central feature of the patch is HST as the crew members will see it through Discovery's overhead windows when the orbiter approaches for rendezvous, retrieval and a subsequent series of spacewalks to perform servicing tasks. The telescope is pointing toward deep space, observing the cosmos. The spiral galaxy symbolizes one of HST's important scientific missions, to accurately determine the cosmic distance scale. To the right of the telescope is a cross-like structure known as a gravitational lens, one of the numerous fundamental discoveries made using HST Imagery. The names of the STS-82 crew members are arranged around the perimeter of the patch with the extravehicular activity's (EVA) participating crew members placed in the upper semicircle and the orbiter crew in the lower one.