By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) – Two veteran NASA astronauts with 500 days of previous spaceflight experience between them are the first crew of Boeing’s pxpCST-100 Starliner space capsule, launched to space in a test flight on Wednesday from Florida.
Barry “Butch” Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams are set to test Starliner’s manual controls before it docks with the International Space Station (ISS) in orbit on Thursday. Both will be arriving at the ISS for the third time.
Here are more details about the astronauts:
* Wilmore, 61, a retired U.S. Navy captain, completed four operational deployments flying fighter jets off the decks of aircraft carriers, including 21 combat missions during the first U.S. Gulf War in the 1990s. He also served as a Navy test pilot and flight instructor before joining the NASA astronaut corps in 2000.
He first flew to the space station as a NASA space shuttle pilot in 2009, and returned to the orbiting laboratory in 2014 – launched aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft with two cosmonauts – for a long-duration mission, including several months as station commander.
To date, Wilmore has logged 178 days in space and four spacewalks.
A Tennessee native who played college football while attending Tennessee Tech University, Wilmore holds advanced degrees in electrical engineering and aviation systems. He is married with two daughters.
* Williams, 58, a former Navy helicopter pilot with experience flying more than 30 different rotary aircraft, was deployed as part of a helicopter combat support squadron during the first Gulf War. She later flew in support of Navy disaster relief operations in Florida following Hurricane Andrew.
She returned to the naval test pilot school as a rotary aircraft instructor before being selected for the NASA astronaut program in 1998.
Like Wilmore, Williams first flew to the space station aboard a space shuttle and made a return visit as a Soyuz passenger riding along with two cosmonauts. Both her ISS tours – in 2006-2007 and in 2012 – were long-duration science expeditions.
After two stays aboard the outpost, Williams had set a world record for the most time spent by a woman in orbit outside a spacecraft, logging a total of 50 hours and 40 minutes combined during seven spacewalks. Her record has since been surpassed by fellow astronaut Peggy Whitson.
During her second ISS mission in 2012, Williams became only the second woman designated as commander of the station.
An avid athlete, Williams in 2007 became the first person to complete a marathon in space, competing virtually in the Boston Marathon from orbit on the space station’s treadmill to go the distance in four hours and 24 minutes.
Taking the concept to the next level, Williams in 2012 completed the first triathlon in space, again using the treadmill and a stationary bicycle, then performing a mix of weight-lifting and resistance exercises on a fitness machine that approximated swimming in microgravity.
So far, Williams has spent a total of 322 days in space, and now made history again by becoming the first woman to fly on the inaugural crewed mission of a new orbital spacecraft.
Born in Massachusetts, Williams currently resides in Houston with her husband, a federal police officer who also flew helicopters earlier in his career.
(Compiled by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Will Dunham)
Comments