Catherine Coleman
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Catherine Grace "Cady" Coleman | |
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Astronaut | |
Nationality | American |
Born | December 14, 1960 Charleston, South Carolina |
Other occupation | Chemist |
Rank | Colonel, USAF |
Space time | 20d 20h 43m |
Selection | 1992 NASA Group |
Missions | STS-73, STS-93 |
Mission insignia |
Catherine Grace "Cady" Coleman (born December 14, 1960, in Charleston, South Carolina) is a colonel in the United States Air Force and a NASA astronaut. She is a veteran of two Space Shuttle missions.
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[edit] Education
In 1979-1980 she was an exchange student at Røyken upper secondary school in Norway. She received a bachelor of science degree in chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983, as a member of the US Air Force ROTC. She was a member of the intercollegiate crew team and was a resident of Baker House.
[edit] Military career
After completing her regular education, she joined the Air Force as a second lieutenant while continuing her graduate work for a Ph.D. at the University of Massachusetts. In 1988 she entered active duty at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base as a research chemist. During her work she also participated at the analysis of the Long Duration Exposure Facility (LDEF) experiment launched with STS-41-C and retrieved with STS-32. In 1991 she received her doctorate in polymer science and engineering from the University of Massachusetts.
[edit] NASA career
She was selected by NASA in 1992 to become a mission specialist astronaut. She has taken part in two space shuttle missions so far. In 1995 she was a member of the STS-73 crew on the scientific mission USML-1 with experiments including biotechnology, combustion science and the physics of fluids. During the flight, she reported to Houston Mission Control that she had spotted an unidentified flying object; however, the "UFO" consisted of another crew member floating by. She also trained for the mission STS-83 to be the backup for Donald A. Thomas; however, as he recovered on time, she did not fly that mission. STS-93 was Coleman's second space flight, in 1999. She was mission specialist in charge of placing the Chandra X-ray Observatory in orbit using the shuttle's robotic arm.[1][2]
Coleman currently serves as chief of robotic arm operations and training for all space shuttle and International Space Station missions. During mission STS-116, when a station solar panel array became stuck in mid-retraction, Coleman led the team responsible for devising its recovery. The solution involved using the station's robotic arm to deploy spacewalking astronauts who manually straightened affected elements of the array.
[edit] Personal
Coleman is married to glass artist Josh Simpson.
[edit] Notes
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