STS-127 Crew
NASA has assigned crews
for the STS-127 space shuttle mission and the Expedition 19 International
Space Station mission. The STS-127 mission will deliver the final
components of the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's Kibo laboratory to
the station. Expedition 19 will double the size of the resident crew on the
complex, expanding it to six people.
Mark L. Polansky will command the shuttle Endeavour for STS-127,
targeted to launch in 2009. Marine Corps Lt. Col. Douglas G. Hurley will
serve as the pilot. Mission specialists are Navy Lt. Cmdr. Christopher J.
Cassidy, Thomas H. Marshburn, David A. Wolf and Julie Payette, a Canadian
Space Agency astronaut.
The mission will deliver Army Col. Timothy L. Kopra to the station to
join Expedition 18 as a flight engineer and science officer and return
Japanese astronaut Koichi Wakata to Earth. Hurley, Cassidy, Marshburn and
Kopra will be making their first trips to space.
STS-127 will launch and install the Kibo Japanese Experiment Module
Exposed Facility and Experiment Logistics Module Exposed Section. The
facility will provide a type of "front porch" for experiments in the
exposed environment, and a robotic arm that will be attached to the Kibo
Pressurized Module and used to position experiments outside the station.
The mission will include five spacewalks.
Polansky first flew as pilot of STS-98 in 2001 and then commanded
STS-116 in 2006. He considers Edison, N.J., his hometown. Polansky has
bachelor's and master's degrees from Purdue University.
Hurley considers Apalachin, N.Y., his hometown. He has a bachelor's
from Tulane University, New Orleans.
Cassidy considers York, Maine, his hometown and has a bachelor's from
the U.S. Naval Academy and a master's from Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT).
Born in Statesville, N.C., Marshburn has a bachelor's from Davidson
College, Davidson, N.C., master's degrees from the University of Virginia
and the University of Texas Medical Branch, and a doctorate of medicine
from Wake Forest University.
A native of Indianapolis, Wolf will be making his fourth spaceflight.
He first flew on STS-58 in 1993. He next flew a 128-day mission to the
Russian space station Mir, launching aboard STS-86 in September 1997 and
landing on STS-89 in January 1998. His third flight was on STS-112 in 2002.
Wolf has a bachelor's from Purdue University and a doctorate of medicine
from Indiana University.
Payette, born in Montreal, flew as a mission specialist on STS-96 in
1999. She has an International Baccalaureate from the United World College
of the Atlantic in the United Kingdom, a bachelor's from McGill University
and a master's from the University of Toronto.
Kopra is a native of Austin, Texas, and holds a bachelor's from the
U.S. Military Academy and a master's from Georgia Institute of Technology.
Expedition 19 will be commanded by cosmonaut and Russian Air Force Col.
Gennady Padalka. In March 2009, he will command the Soyuz spacecraft that
will launch him and astronaut Michael R. Barratt to the station. Astronaut
Nicole P. Stott will join them, arriving on the STS-128 shuttle mission to
replace Kopra. She will serve as a flight engineer and science officer and
return to Earth on the next Soyuz spacecraft. Barratt and Stott will be
making their first trips to space.
In May 2009, cosmonaut and Russian Air Force Lt. Col. Yuri Lonchakov
will command a Soyuz spacecraft that will launch to join Expedition 19 in
progress on the station. With Lonchakov will be European Space Agency
astronaut Frank De Winne of Belgium and Canadian Space Agency astronaut
Robert B. Thirsk. Their arrival will expand the station's crew size to six
for the first time. Lonchakov and De Winne will serve as flight engineers
on the station and return on the Soyuz with Stott. Thirsk also will serve
as a flight engineer and will return to Earth on STS-129.
Expedition 19 will include visits by two space shuttle missions that
will equip the station with the additional facilities needed to support a
six-person crew. Expedition 19 also will prepare the station for the later
arrival of Russian research modules and additional docking ports.
Padalka commanded Expedition 26 on Mir in 1998 and 1999, and Expedition
9 on the ISS in 2004. He was born in Krasnodar, Russia, and graduated from
Eisk Military Aviation College.
Barratt considers Camas, Wash., his hometown. He has a bachelor's from
the University of Washington, a master's from Wright State University,
Dayton, Ohio, and a doctorate of medicine from Northwestern University.
Stott considers Clearwater, Fla., her hometown. She has a bachelor's
from Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and a master's from the
University of Central Florida.
Lonchakov flew as a mission specialist on STS-100 in 2001. Born in
Balkhash, Dzhezkazkansk Region, he graduated from the Orenburg Air Force
Pilot School and the Zhukovski Air Force Academy.
De Winne flew an 11-day mission as a flight engineer on a Soyuz
spacecraft to the International Space Station in 2002. He was born in
Ghent, Belgium, and graduated from the Royal School of Cadets. He has a
master's from the Royal Military Academy.
Thirsk flew on STS-78 in 1996. He was born in New Westminster, British
Columbia, and has a bachelor's from the University of Calgary, masters'
degrees from MIT and a doctorate of medicine from McGill University.
Backup expedition crew assignments also have been made. A summary of
Expedition 19's assigned crews and backups are:
-
Gennady Padalka, Russian cosmonaut (Backup: Maxim Suraev)
- Mike Barratt, NASA astronaut (Backup: Shannon Walker)
- Timothy Kopra, NASA astronaut (Backup: Timothy J. Creamer)
- Nicole Stott, NASA astronaut (Backup: Catherine Coleman)
- Yuri Lonchakov, Russian cosmonaut (Backup: Dmitri Kondratyev)
- Frank De Winne, ESA astronaut (Backup: Andre Kuipers)
- Robert Thirsk, CSA Astronaut (Backup: Chris A. Hadfield)
Source: NASA