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Astronaut Kenneth D. Bowersox,
Expedition Six mission commander, moves toward a computer
in the Unity node on the International Space Station. (January
31, 2003) |
KENNETH D. BOWERSOX (CAPTAIN, USN)
NASA ASTRONAUT
PERSONAL DATA: Born November 14, 1956, in Portsmouth,
Virginia, but considers Bedford, Indiana, to be his hometown.
EDUCATION: Graduated from Bedford High School,
Bedford, Indiana, in 1974; received a bachelor of science degree
in aerospace engineering from the United States Naval Academy in
1978, and a master of science degree in mechanical engineering from
Columbia University in 1979.
EXPERIENCE: Bowersox received his commission in
the United States Navy in 1978 and was designated a Naval Aviator
in 1981. He was then assigned to Attack Squadron 22, aboard the
USS Enterprise, where he served as a Fleet A-7E pilot, logging over
300 carrier arrested landings. Following graduation from the United
States Air Force Test Pilot School at Edwards Air Force Base, California,
in 1985, he moved to the Naval Weapon Center at China Lake, California,
where he spent the next year and a half as a test pilot flying A-7E
and F/A-18 aircraft until advised of his selection to the astronaut
program.
NASA EXPERIENCE: Selected as an astronaut candidate
by NASA in June 1987, Bowersox completed a one-year training and
evaluation program in August 1988. He has held a variety of assignments
since then including: flight software testing in the Shuttle Avionics
Integration Laboratory (SAIL); Technical Assistant to the Director
of Flight Crew Operations; Astronaut Office representative for Orbiter
landing and rollout issues; Chief of the Astronaut Office Safety
Branch; Chairman of the Spaceflight Safety Panel; during several
Shuttle missions he served as a spacecraft communicator (CAPCOM)
in the Houston Mission Control Center. He also served as back-up
to the first International Space Station crew. A four flight veteran,
Bowersox has logged over 50 days in space. He flew as pilot on STS-50
in 1992 and STS-61 in 1993, and was the spacecraft commander on
STS-73 in 1995 and STS-82 in 1997. Since November 25, 2002, Bowersox
has been living and working aboard the International Space Station.
The Expedition-Six crew (two American astronauts and one Russian
cosmonaut) will stay on the station for approximately 4 months.
SPACE FLIGHT EXPERIENCE:
STS-50, June 25-July 9, 1992, was the first
flight of the United States Microgravity Laboratory and the first
Extended Duration Orbiter flight. Over a two-week period, the STS-50
flight crew aboard Space Shuttle Columbia conducted a wide variety
of experiments relating to materials processing and fluid physics
in a microgravity environment.
STS-61, December 2-13, 1993, was the Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
servicing and repair mission. During the 11-day flight, the HST
was captured and restored to full capacity through a record five
space walks by four astronauts.
STS-73, Oct. 20 to Nov. 5, 1995, was the second flight of the United
States Microgravity Laboratory. The mission focused on materials
science, biotechnology, combustion science, the physics of fluids,
and numerous scientific experiments housed in the pressurized Spacelab
module.
STS-82, Feb. 11-21, 1997, was the second Hubble Space Telescope
(HST) maintenance mission. During the flight, the crew retrieved
and secured the HST in Discovery’s payload bay. In five space
walks, two teams installed two new spectrometers and eight replacement
instruments, as well as replacing insulation patches over three
compartments containing key data processing, electronics and scientific
instrument telemetry packages. Following completion of upgrades
and repairs, HST was boosted to a higher orbit and redeployed.
STS-113 / ISS-06
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