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ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli assigned to crew for Shuttle flight STS-120



 
 
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Old June 19th 06, 02:08 PM posted to sci.space.shuttle,sci.space.station
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Default ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli assigned to crew for Shuttle flight STS-120

N° 19-2006 - Paris, 19 June 2006

ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli assigned to crew for Shuttle flight STS-120

ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli, of Italian nationality, was today assigned to
the crew of the Space Shuttle flight which in summer 2007 will launch Node
2, an Italian-built U.S. connecting module, to the International Space
Station.

For his first space flight, Nespoli will serve as mission specialist,
joining five NASA astronauts: Air Force Col. Pamela A. Melroy, who will
command the STS-120 Shuttle mission (a veteran Shuttle pilot and the second
woman to be named commander); Marine Corps Col. George D. Zamka, on his
first space flight, who will serve as pilot; and mission specialists Scott
E. Parazynski, Army Col. Douglas H. Wheelock and Navy Capt. Michael J.
Foreman, also on his first space flight.

Nespoli's mission will be carried out in the framework of the Memorandum of
Understanding between the Italian space agency (ASI) and NASA for the supply
to NASA of three pressurised Multi-Purpose Logistic Modules (MPLM) and the
assignment to Italy of flight opportunities and ISS utilisation.

Node 2 for the Space Station is a pressurised module which, along with Nodes
1 and 3, interconnects the research, habitation, control and docking modules
of the Station itself. The Nodes
are used to control and distribute resources between the connected elements.
This Node 2 flight precedes the launch of ESA's Columbus laboratory to the
ISS.

Note for Editors
Paolo Nespoli was born on 6 April 1957 in Milan, Italy. He was awarded a
Bachelor of Science degree in aerospace engineering in 1988 and a Master of
Science degree in aeronautics and astronautics in 1989 from the Polytechnic
University of New York. He was awarded the Laurea in Ingegneria Meccanica by
the Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy in 1990.
Nespoli is a qualified professional engineer, private pilot with instrument
rating, advanced scuba diver and Nitrox diver. During service in the
Italian army between 1977 and 1984, he qualified as master parachutist,
parachutist instructor, jump master, high altitude-low-opening freefall
parachutist and special forces operator.
Nespoli resumed his university studies in 1985, leaving army duty in 1987.
Upon completing his MSc in 1989, he returned to Italy to work as a design
engineer in Florence, where he conducted mechanical analysis and provided
support for qualification of the flight units of the electron gun assembly,
one of the main components of the Italian space agency's Tethered Satellite
System.
In 1991, he joined ESA's European Astronaut Centre in Cologne, Germany. As
an astronaut training engineer, he contributed to the preparation and
implementation of basic training for European astronauts and was responsible
for the preparation and management of astronaut proficiency maintenance. He
was also responsible for the astronaut training database, a software system
used for the preparation and management of such training.
In 1995, he was seconded to the EuroMir project at the Agency's ESTEC
establishment in Noordwijk in the Netherlands, where he was responsible for
the team that prepared, integrated and supported the payload and crew
support computer used on the Russian space station Mir.
In 1996, he was seconded to NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas,
where he worked in the Spaceflight Training Division on the preparation of
training for ground personnel and in-orbit crew for the International Space
Station.
In July 1998, he was selected to be an astronaut by the Italian space agency
and one month later joined ESA's European Astronaut Corps at its home base
of the European Astronaut Centre in Cologne, Germany.
In August 1998, he was relocated to NASA Johnson Space Center and assigned
to the XVIIth NASA Astronaut class. In 2000, he obtained the basic
qualifications necessary to be assigned to a mission onboard the Space
Shuttle and to the Space Station. In July 2001, he successfully completed
the training course for operating the Shuttle's robotic arm. In September
2003, he successfully completed extra-vehicular activity advanced-skills
training.



Nodes
The International Space Station will have three Nodes, provided by NASA.
Node 1, called Unity, was developed by NASA. It became the second ISS module
in orbit after its launch in December 1998. Nodes 2 and 3 are being
developed for NASA under an ESA contract with European industry, with
Alcatel-Alenia Space as prime contractor. ESA assigned responsibility for
Node 2 development to the Italian space agency (ASI), in order to take
advantage of the same structural concept as the Multipurpose Pressurised
Logistics Module (MPLM), a pressurised cargo container which travels in the
Shuttle's cargo bay, and Columbus.

Node 2 is the first European node to be launched. It will serve as a
connecting element for the European Columbus laboratory, the US laboratory
Destiny and the Japanese laboratory Kibo. It also will be the attachment
point for the Japanese HII transfer vehicle. It will carry a docking adapter
for the US Space Shuttle and serve as an attachment point for the MPLMs.

Node 2 is also designed to be a working base point for the Remote
Manipulator System, a Canadian robotic arm on the ISS called Canadarm 2.
Node 3 will eventually house the life support equipment necessary for the
permanent crew of six and will also accommodate ESA's Cupola observation
module, a seven-window dome-shaped structure from where Canadarm 2 will be
operated and the crew will have a panoramic view of space. Node 3 will be
attached to the nadir port of Node 1 and will be delivered by ESA to NASA
early in 2007.

For more information, please contact:

ESA Media Relations Division
Tel + 33 1 53 69 71 55
Fax. +33 1 5369 76 90


ASI External Relations Unit
Tel + 39 06 8567321/324
Fax + 39 06 8416265



More information on ESA's contribution to the International Space Station,
ESA astronauts, the future Exploration programme, etc., visit:
http://www.esa.int/esaHS/index.html

For more information on ESA and its missions, visit:
http://www.esa.int

More information on ASI
http://www.asi.it

For complete NASA astronaut biographical information, visit:
http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios
For more information on NASA and its missions, visit: http://www.nasa.gov



--
--------------

Jacques :-)

www.spacepatches.nl


 




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