Robert Behnken
Robert Behnken | |
---|---|
NASA Astronaut | |
Statsborger | USA |
Nationalitet | Amerikansk |
Status | Aktiv |
Født | 28. juli 1970 Alder 52 Creve Coeur, Missouri |
Andet arbejde | Testingeniør |
Uddannelses- sted | California Institute of Technology U.S. Air Force Test Pilot School Pattonville High School Washington University i St. Louis |
Rang | Major, United States Air Force |
Udvælgelse | NASA-gruppen fra 2000 |
Mission(er) | STS-123 STS-400 næste mission. |
Missionsemblemer |
Robert Louis Behnken (født 28. juli 1970) er en NASA-astronaut, han har fløjet en rumfærgemission; STS-123 som missionsspecialist.
Robert Behnken er på standby til redningsmissionen STS-400.
Eksterne henvisninger
- NASA Biografi af Robert Behnken (engelsk)
- interview Arkiveret 13. marts 2008 hos Wayback Machine (engelsk)
Denne artikel eller dette afsnit er forældet.Lær hvordan og hvornår man kan fjerne denne skabelonbesked) ( |
Spire Denne biografi om en amerikaner er en spire som bør udbygges. Du er velkommen til at hjælpe Wikipedia ved at udvide den. |
Medier brugt på denne side
Forfatter/Opretter: David Vignoni (globe, clock face/ring), Anomie (clock hands), David Göthberg (making the clock red, shadows). Anomie and David G (putting all the parts together)., Licens: LGPL
Globe with clock to represent a "current event"
Forfatter/Opretter:
The original uploader was Yzmo at engelsk Wikipedia.
Later versions were uploaded by Tene at en.wikipedia., Licens: LGPLThis image is combined from the following two images.
STS-123 continues assembly of the International Space Station (ISS). The primary mission objectives include rotating an expedition crew member and installing both the first component of the Japanese Experimental Module (the Experimental Logistics Module - Pressurized Section (ELM-PS)) and the Canadian Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator (SPDM). In addition, STS-123 will deliver various spare ISS components and leave behind the sensor boom used for inspecting the shuttle's thermal protection system. A follow-on mission to ISS will utilize and then return home with this sensor boom. A total of five spacewalks are planned to accomplish these tasks. The mission will also require the use of both the shuttle and ISS robotic arms. STS-123 will utilize the Station-Shuttle Power Transfer System to extend the docked portion of the mission to eleven days, with a total planned duration of 15 days. The crew patch depicts the space shuttle in orbit with the crew names trailing behind. STS-123's major additions to ISS (the ELM-PS installation with the shuttle robotic arm and the fully constructed SPDM) are both illustrated. The ISS is shown in the configuration that the STS-123 crew will encounter when they arrive.