Loren Acton
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NASA Astronaut | |
---|---|
Nationality | American |
Born | March 7, 1936 Lewistown, Montana |
Occupation1 | Solar X-ray Physicist |
Space time | 7d 22h 45m |
Selection | 1978 NASA Group |
Mission(s) | STS-51-F |
Mission insignia | |
1 previous or current |
Loren Wilber Acton (born March 7, 1936) is a physicist and was a Payload Specialist astronaut.
Born in Lewistown, Montana he went on to receive a bachelor of science degree from Montana State University in 1959, and a Doctor of Philosophy in Solar Physics from the University of Colorado at Boulder in 1965.
Doctor Acton was the senior staff scientist with the Space Sciences Laboratory, Lockheed Palo Alto Research Laboratory, California. As a research scientist, his principle duties included conducting scientific studies of the Sun and other celestial objects using advanced space instruments and serving as a co-investigator on one of the Spacelab 2 solar experiments, the Solar Optical Universal Polarimeter. He was selected as one of four payload specialists for Spacelab 2 on August 9, 1978, and after seven years of training he did fly on STS-51-F/ Spacelab-2. At mission conclusion, Dr. Acton had traveled over 2.8 million miles in 126 Earth orbits, logging over 190 hours in space.
He is married and has two children.
Doctor Loren Acton is currently a Research Professor of Physics in the Solar Physics Group at Montana State University where he currently oversees the solar physics group, which carries on an active research program under NASA support. They are actively involved in day-to-day operation and scientific utilization of the Japan/US/UK Yohkoh mission for studies of high-energy solar physics. This satellite carries a solar x-ray telescope, prepared under the leadership of Dr. Acton, for the study of high-energy processes, such as solar flares, on the sun. The primary emission of the extremely hot outer atmosphere of the sun, the solar corona, is at x-ray wavelengths and the extended duration, high resolution x-ray imagery from Yohkoh are being analyzed in an effort to learn why the sun has a corona at all and why it varies in intensity so strongly in response to the 11 year sunspot cycle.