Ulrich Walter

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Ulrich Hans Walter
Ulrich Walter
DFVLR Astronaut
Nationality German
Born February 9, 1954
Iserlohn, Germany
Other occupation Physicist
Space time 9d 23h 40m
Selection 1987 German Group
Missions STS-55
Mission
insignia

Ulrich Hans Walter (born February 9, 1954) is a German physicist/engineer and a former DFVLR astronaut.

Walter was born in Iserlohn, Germany. After finishing secondary school there and two years in the Bundeswehr, he studied physics at the University of Cologne. In 1980, he was awarded a diploma degree, and five years later a doctorate, both in the field of solid state physics.

After two post-doc positions at the Argonne National Laboratory, Chicago, Illinois, and the University of California at Berkeley, California, he was selected in 1987 to join the German astronaut team. From 1988 to 1990, he completed basic training at the German German Aerospace Center, and was then nominated to be in the prime crew for the second German spacelab mission.

In 1993, he flew on board the Space Shuttle Columbia on mission STS-55 (Spacelab D-2) as a Payload specialist. He spent 9 days, 23 hours, and 40 minutes in space.

After his spaceflight he worked for another four years at DLR, managing a space imaging database project. When the German astronaut team was merged into a European Space Agency, he did not transfer, but quit to work at IBM Germany.

Since 2003, he is a full professor at the Technische Universität München (Munich, Germany), holding the chair for spacefare technology at the University's faculty of mechanical engineering.

He is author of several books, and also does work as presenter of a popular science magazine show on Bavarian TV.

Walter is married and has two children.

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