Ronald M. Sega

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Ronald Michael Sega
Ronald M. Sega
Astronaut
 Nationality American
 Born December 4, 1952
Macedonia, Ohio
 Occupation1 Engineer
 Rank Major General, USAF
 Space time 17d 12h 25m
 Selection 1990 NASA Group
 Mission(s) STS-60, STS-76
Mission insignia
 1 previous or current

Ronald Michael Sega (also Ronad Šega) (Ph.D.) (born December 4, 1952 ), Retired NASA Astronaut, currently Under Secretary of the United States Department of the Air Force. Sega was born in Cleveland, Ohio and is of Slovene origin. He is married to Ann Sega and they have two sons.

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[edit] Education

Sega graduated from Nordonia High School, Macedonia, Ohio, in 1970 after which he received a bachelor of science degree in mathematics and physics from the United States Air Force Academy in 1974, a master of science degree in physics from Ohio State University in 1975, and a doctorate in electrical engineering from University of Colorado at Boulder in 1982.

[edit] Organizations

[edit] Honors

  • Distinguished Graduate of the United States Air Force Academy, 1974.
  • Top Graduate of the Pilot Instructor Training Course, 1976.
  • Officer of the Year in the Department of Physics, U.S. Air Force Academy, 1980.
  • Recipient of Air Force Meritorious Service Medal, Commendation Medal, and Reserve Achievement Medal.
  • Air Force Research Fellow — Air Force Office of Scientific Research, 1985.
  • Received the Outstanding Faculty Award — Department of Electrical Engineering at the University of Colorado, 1985.
  • Selected to the Academic Hall of Fame of his high school in Macedonia, Ohio, 1988.
  • Reserve Officer of the Year (IMA), Air Force Space Command, 1988
  • Reserve Officer of the Year (IMA), U.S. Air Force, 1988
  • Received an honorary doctorate from Clarkson University, 1993
  • Recipient of the NASA Space Flight Medal, 1994 and 1996
  • Superior Achievement Award (NASA Director of Operations, Russia), 1995
  • NASA Outstanding Leadership Medal, 1997

[edit] Experience

Sega completed pilot training in 1976 and served as an Instructor Pilot at Williams Air Force Base, Arizona, until 1979. From 1979 to 1982 he was on the faculty of the United States Air Force Academy in the physics department where he designed and constructed a laboratory facility to investigate microwave fields using infrared techniques while pursuing a doctorate in electrical engineering. In 1982 he joined the faculty of the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs as assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. He was promoted to associate professor in 1985, granted tenure in 1988, promoted to professor in 1990, and is currently on an extended leave of absence. From 1987 to 1988 he served as Technical Director, Lasers and Aerospace Mechanics Directorate, of the Frank J. Seiler Research Laboratory at the U.S. Air Force Academy. From 1989 to 1990, while on leave from the University of Colorado, he served as Research Associate Professor of Physics at the University of Houston, affiliated with the Space Vacuum Epitaxy Center, and is adjunct professor of physics. Sega is a co-principal investigator and mission director for the Wake Shield Facility (WSF) which has flown on Space Shuttle mission STS-60 in February 1994 and STS-69 in 1995. He has authored or co-authored over 100 technical publications.

An Air Force Reserve Officer, he holds an aeronautical rating of Command Pilot and the rank of Colonel. He serves as a reserve augmentee to the Director, Plans, Air Force Space Command.

As a pilot, Sega has logged over 4,000 hours in the Air Force, Air Force Reserves, and NASA.

Sega became an astronaut in July 1991 after selection in 1990. His technical assignments have included:

  • working Remote Manipulator System (RMS) issues for the Astronaut Office Mission Development Branch
  • supporting Orbiter software verification in the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL)
  • Chief of Astronaut Appearances
  • Science Support Group Lead
  • Space Station integration team
  • Astronaut Representative to the Space Station Science and Utilization Advisory Board (primarily an external board for NASA).

From November 1994 to March 1995, Sega was the NASA Director of Operations, Star City, Russia (The Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center) responsible for managing NASA activities at Star City. These activities involved building an organization and infrastructure to support Astronaut and Cosmonaut mission and science training for flight on the Russian Space Station Mir. He also participated in training on Russian Space Systems and was the first American to train in the Russian EVA suit (Orlan) in their underwater facility (Hydrolaboratory). A veteran of two space flights (STS-60 in 1994 and STS-76 in 1996), Sega has logged over 420 hours in space.

Sega left NASA on July 1, 1996 to become Dean of the College of Engineering and Applied Science, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. In 2001, he became acting Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Programs. In August of that year Sega was named Director of Defense Research and Engineering, Office of the Secretary of Defense. In 2005 he became Under Secretary of the Air Force, thus serving as Department of Defense Executive Agent and Milestone Decision Authority for Space.


[edit] Space flight experience

STS-60 was the first joint U.S./Russian Space Shuttle mission. Launched on February 3, 1994, STS-60 was the second flight of the Space Habitation Module-2 (Spacehab-2), and the first flight of the Wake Shield Facility (WSF-1). During the 8-day flight, the crew of Discovery conducted a wide variety of biological, materials science, earth observation, and life science experiments. Sega was the flight engineer for ascent and entry on this mission, performed several experiments on orbit, and operated the robotic arm, berthing the Wake Shield onto its payload bay carrier on four separate occasions. Following 130 orbits of the Earth in 3,439,705 miles, STS-60 landed at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, on February 11, 1994. With the completion of his first space flight, Sega logged 8 days, 7 hours, 9 minutes in space.

STS-76, the third docking mission to the Russian space station Mir, launched on March 22, 1996 with a crew of six aboard Atlantis. Following rendezvous and docking with Mir, a NASA Astronaut transferred to Mir for a five month stay to begin a continuous presence of U.S. astronauts aboard Mir for the next two years. Sega was the payload commander for this mission and lead on Biorack, a small multipurpose laboratory located in the Spacehab module carried in the Shuttle payload bay. Biorack was used to technology development, fundamental biology (research into plant and animal cellular function), and environment characterization. He was responsible for planning and on-orbit operations, including extensive transfer of logistics and science, including 4800 pounds of science and mission hardware, food, water and air to Mir, and returning over 1100 pounds of U.S. and ESA science and Russian hardware. Following 144 orbits of the Earth, Atlantis landed with a crew of five at Edwards Air Force Base in California on March 31, 1996. Mission duration was 9 days, 5 hours, 15 minutes.

[edit] External links

This article contains material that originally came from a NASA website. According to their site usage guidelines, "NASA material is not protected by copyright unless noted". For more information, please review NASA's use guidelines.[[Category:Living people|Sega, Ronald M.]

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