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STS-40 Mission Specialist
(MS) M. Rhea Seddon (left) and Commander Bryan D. O'Connor
review the text and graphics system (TAGS) 15 ft long printout
on the middeck of Columbia, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 102. Using
the intravehicular activity (IVA) foot restraints, the two
obviously expect their perusing to take awhile. During the
nine-day Spacelab Life Sciences 1 (SLS-1) mission, the STS-40
crewmembers received a large volume of similar printouts from
ground controllers. Taped to the starboard wall behind them
are a University of California banner, a training team portrait,
and family photos. |
BRYAN D. O'CONNOR (COLONEL, USMC, RET.)
NASA ASTRONAUT (FORMER)
PERSONAL DATA: Born September 6, 1946, in Orange,
California, but considers Twentynine Palms, California to be his hometown.
Bryan and his wife Susie have two sons, Thomas, and Kevin. The O'Connor
family enjoys hiking, scuba diving, music, and travel.
EDUCATION: Graduated from Twentynine Palms High School,
Twentynine Palms, California, in 1964; received a Bachelor of Science
degree in Engineering (minor in Aeronautical Engineering) from the
United States Naval Academy in 1968 and a Master of Science degree
in Aeronautical Systems from the University of West Florida in 1970.
He graduated from the Naval Safety School at the Naval Postgraduate
School, Monterey, California in 1972 and from the Naval Test Pilot
School, Naval Air Test Center, Patuxent River, Maryland in 1976.
SPECIAL HONORS: Naval Safety School Top Graduate;
Naval Test Pilot School Distinguished Graduate Award; Defense Superior
Service Medal (2); Distinguished Flying Cross; Navy Meritorious Service
Medal; NASA Distinguished Service Medal; NASA Outstanding Leadership
Medal (2); NASA Exceptional Service Medal (2); NASA Exceptional Achievement
Medal; NASA Silver Snoopy Award; AIAA System Effectiveness and Safety
Award; AIAA Barry M.Goldwater Education Award; Aviation Week and Space
Technology Laureate (Space and Missiles).
EXPERIENCE: O'Connor began active duty with the United
States Marine Corps in June 1968 following graduation from the U.S.
Naval Academy at Annapolis. He received his Naval Aviator's wings
in June 1970, and served as an attack pilot flying the A-4 Skyhawk
and the AV-8A Harrier on land and sea assignments in the United States,
Europe and the Western Pacific. O'Connor
attended the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School in 1975 and served as
a test pilot with the Naval Air Test Center's Strike Test Directorate
at Patuxent River, Maryland. During this 3-½ year assignment,
he participated in evaluations of various conventional and VSTOL
aircraft, including the A-4, OV-10, AV-8, and X-22 VSTOL research
aircraft. From June 1977 to June 1979 he was the Naval Air Test
Center project officer in charge of all Harrier flight testing,
including the planning and execution of the First Navy Preliminary
Evaluation of the YAV-8B advanced Harrier prototype. When informed
of his selection to NASA's Astronaut Program in 1980, he was serving
as the Deputy Program Manager (Acquisition) for the AV-8 program
at the Naval Air Systems Command in Washington, D.C.
NASA EXPERIENCE: O'Connor was selected as an astronaut
in May 1980. After a one-year initial training program at NASA's
Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, O'Connor served in a variety
of functions in support of the first test flights of the Space Shuttle,
including simulator test pilot for STS-1and 2, safety/photo chase
pilot for STS-3, and support crew for STS-4. He was CAPCOM (spacecraft
communicator) for STS-5 through STS-9. He also served as Aviation
Safety Officer for the Astronaut Corps.
When the Challenger and its crew were lost in
January, 1986 O'Connor was given a number of safety and management
assignments over the next three years as the Space Agency recovered
from the disaster. In the first days after the accident, he organized
the initial wreckage reassembly activities at Cape Canaveral. Then
he established and managed the operation of the NASA Headquarters
Action Center, the link between NASA and the Presidential Blue Ribbon
Accident Investigation Panel (The Rogers Commission). In March 1986
he was assigned duties as Assistant (Operations) to the Space Shuttle
Program Manager, as well as first Chairman of NASA's new Space Flight
Safety Panel: jobs he held until February 1988 and 1989 respectively.
He subsequently served as Deputy Director of Flight Crew Operations
from February 1988 until August 1991.
As of this writing, O'Connor has flown over 5000
hours in over 40 types of aircraft. A veteran of two space flights,
he has over 386 hours in space, covering five and three quarter
million miles in 253 orbits of the earth. O'Connor was pilot on
STS-61B in 1985 and was crew commander on STS-40 in 1991.
O'Connor left NASA in August 1991 to become commanding
officer of the Marine Aviation Detachment, Naval Air Test Center,
Patuxent River. During this 10 month assignment, he led 110 marine
test pilots and technicians, participated as an AV-8B project test
pilot, instructed students at the Test Pilot School, directed the
Naval Air Test Center Museum, and became the first marine to serve
as Deputy Director and Chief of Staff of the Flight Test and Engineering
Group.
O'Connor returned to NASA Headquarters in Washington,
retiring from the Marine Corps to become the Deputy Associate Administrator
for Space Flight. He was immediately assigned the task of developing
a comprehensive flight safety improvement plan for the Space Shuttle,
working closely with Congress and the Administration for funding
of the major upgrade program. Then in late summer 1992, he was assigned
as leader of the negotiating team that traveled to Moscow to establish
the framework for what subsequently became the ambitious and complex
joint manned space program known as Shuttle/MIR.
In March 1993 O'Connor was assigned as Director,
Space Station Redesign. He and his 50 person team of engineers,
managers, and International Partners developed, then recommended
substantial vehicle and program restructure strategies which amounted
to $300 million in savings per year, thus helping to save the program
from cancellation by Congress. In September, he was named Acting
Space Station Program Director. He held that position throughout
the transition from the Freedom Program to the new International
Space Station Program and the announcement of a permanent Program
Director in January 1994.
In April 1994, O'Connor was reassigned as Director,
Space Shuttle Program. As such, he was responsible for all aspects
of the $3.5 billion per year program, leading over 27,000 government
and contractor personnel. By the time he left NASA in March 1996,
he had directed NASA's largest and most visible program through
twelve safe, successful missions, including the first three flights
to the Russian Space Station, MIR. He planned and led an extensive
program restructure designed to save the taxpayers approximately
$1 billion over the five-year budget horizon. Of equal importance
he oversaw the introduction of several major safety improvements
developed to prevent another "Challenger".
O'Connor left NASA in February 1996 to become
an aerospace consultant. He also served on the Advisory Board of
Airship Resources Corporation, a startup company planning to introduce
high technology night sign display systems to the next generation
large airships then under development in the United Kingdom. He
currently serves as Director of Engineering for Futron Corporation,
a Washington DC based company providing risk management and aerospace
safety and dependability services to government and commercial organizations
including the FAA, DOD, NASA, DOE, Westinghouse, Allied Signal and
others.
SPACE FLIGHT EXPERIENCE:
STS-61B Atlantis (November 26 to December 3, 1985). STS-61B was
the 22nd Shuttle flight and was the second-ever night shuttle launch
from the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. It was the heaviest payload
weight carried to orbit by the Space Shuttle to date, and the first
flight to deploy 4 satellites. After completing 108 orbits of the
earth in 165 hours, Atlantis returned to land at Edwards Air Force
Base, California.
STS-40 Columbia (June 5-14, 1991). STS-40/SLS-1
was the first Space Shuttle mission dedicated to life science studies.
During the 9-day mission the crew performed an extensive series
of biomedical experiments. After 145 orbits of the Earth traveling
3.29 million miles in 218 hours, O'Connor piloted Columbia to a
landing at Edwards Air Force Base, California, his crew having safely
and successfully completed over 100% of their mission objectives.
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