Ken Mattingly

Thomas Kenneth "Ken" Mattingly II
NASA Astronaut
Nationality USA
Born March 17, 1936 (1936-03-17) (age 75)
Chicago, Illinois
Other occupation Engineer
Rank Rear Admiral (upper half), USN
Time in space 21d 04h 34m
Selection 1966 NASA Group
Total EVAs 1
Total EVA time 1 hour 23 minutes
Missions Apollo 16, STS-4, STS-51-C
Mission insignia

Thomas Kenneth "Ken" Mattingly II, (born March 17, 1936) is a retired American astronaut and rear admiral in the United States Navy who flew on the Apollo 16, STS-4 and STS-51-C missions. He had been scheduled to fly on Apollo 13, but was held back due to concerns about a potential illness (which he did not contract). He later flew as Command Module Pilot for Apollo 16, making him one of only 24 people to have flown to the Moon.

Contents

Biography

Early career

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Mattingly attended school in Hialeah, Florida, and was active in the Boy Scouts of America where he achieved its second highest rank, Life Scout. He graduated from Miami Edison High School and went on to receive a B.S. degree in Aeronautical Engineering from Auburn University in 1958, where he was also a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity (Epsilon Alpha chapter). He joined the US Navy as an Ensign in 1958 and received his wings in 1960. Then, he was assigned to VA-35 and flew A-1H Skyraider aircraft aboard the USS Saratoga from 1960 to 1963. In July 1963, he served in VAH-11 deployed aboard the USS Franklin D. Roosevelt where he flew the A-3B Skywarrior aircraft for two years.

NASA career

Mattingly was a student at the Air Force Aerospace Research Pilot School when NASA selected him as an astronaut in April 1966. His first assignment was to be the Command Module Pilot on the Apollo 13 mission. Three days prior to launch, he was removed from the mission due to exposure to German measles, which he never contracted. As a result, he missed the dramatic in-flight explosion that crippled the spacecraft. However, Mattingly was involved in helping the crew solve the problem of power conservation during re-entry.

Apollo 16

Apollo 16 (April 16–27, 1972) was the fifth manned lunar landing mission. The crew included John W. Young (commander), Ken Mattingly (command module pilot), and Charles M. Duke, Jr. (lunar module pilot), who had exposed him to measles in 1970. The mission assigned to Apollo 16 was to collect samples from the lunar highlands near the crater Descartes. While in lunar orbit the scientific instruments aboard the command and service module Casper extended the photographic and geochemical mapping of a belt around the lunar equator. Twenty-six separate scientific experiments were conducted both in lunar orbit and during cislunar coast. Major emphasis was placed on using man as an orbital observer capitalizing on the human eye's unique capabilities and man's inherent curiosity.

During the return leg of the mission, Mattingly carried out an EVA to retrieve film and data packages from the science bay on the side of the service module. Although the mission of Apollo 16 was terminated one day early, due to concern over several spacecraft malfunctions, all major objectives were accomplished through the ceaseless efforts of the mission support team and were made possible by the most rigorous preflight planning yet associated with an Apollo mission.

Space shuttle flights

Following his return to Earth, Mattingly served in astronaut managerial positions in the Space Shuttle development program.

He was named to command STS-4, the fourth and final orbital test flight of the Space Shuttle Columbia, launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, on June 27, 1982 with Henry W. Hartsfield, Jr., as the pilot. This 7-day mission was designed to: further verify ascent and entry phases of shuttle missions; perform continued studies of the effects of long-term thermal extremes on the Orbiter subsystems; and conduct a survey of Orbiter-induced contamination on the Orbiter payload bay. Additionally, the crew operated several scientific experiments located in the Orbiter's cabin and in the payload bay. These experiments included the Continuous Flow Electrophoresis System experiment designed to investigate the separation of biological materials in a fluid according to their surface electrical charge.[1] This experiment was a pathfinder for the first commercial venture to capitalize on the unique characteristics of space. The crew is also credited with effecting an in-flight repair which enabled them to activate the first operational "Getaway Special" (composed of nine experiments that ranged from algae and duckweed growth in space to fruit fly and brine shrimp genetic studies). STS-4 completed 112 orbits of the Earth before landing on a concrete runway at Edwards Air Force Base, California, on July 4, 1982.

STS-51-C, the first Space Shuttle Department of Defense mission, launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida on January 24, 1985. The crew included Ken Mattingly (spacecraft commander), Loren Shriver (pilot), Jim Buchli and Ellison Onizuka (mission specialists), and Gary Payton (DOD payload specialist). STS-51C performed its DOD mission which included deployment of a modified Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) vehicle from the Space Shuttle Discovery. Landing occurred on January 27, 1985.

Post-NASA

In 1989, Mattingly retired from NASA and the Navy with the two-star rank of rear admiral (upper half), and entered the private sector. He worked as a director in Grumman's Space Station Support Division. He then headed the Atlas booster program for General Dynamics in San Diego, California. At Lockheed Martin he was vice president in charge of the X-33 development program. He is currently working at Systems Planning and Analysis in Virginia.[2]

In media

Mattingly was portrayed in the 1995 movie Apollo 13 by Gary Sinise. He was portrayed in the 1998 miniseries From the Earth to the Moon by Željko Ivanek.

References

External links