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Programm (pdf)
Programme en français(pdf)
Programme in English(pdf)
Medienmitteilung (pdf)
Communiqué de presse (pdf)
Press release (pdf)
Mobilité dans le contexte spatial
CV
Claude
Nicollier has been for nearly 30 years a European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut
of Swiss nationality. He graduated from the University of Lausanne in 1970
(Bachelor of Science in physics) and the University of Geneva in 1975 (Master
of Science in astrophysics). He also graduated as a Swiss Air Force pilot in
1966, an airline pilot in 1974 (flew DC-9s for Swissair 1974-1976), and a test
pilot in 1988 (Empire Test Pilot's School, Boscombe Down, United Kingdom).
He was a
member of the first group of ESA astronauts selected in 1978. He joined Group 9
of NASA astronauts in 1980 for Space Shuttle training at the Johnson Space
Center, Houston, Texas, where he has been stationed until September 2005. His
technical assignments in Houston have included Space Shuttle flight software
verification in the Shuttle Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL), development
of Tethered Satellite System (TSS) retrieval techniques, Remote Manipulator
System (RMS) and International Space Station (ISS) robotics support. From 1996
to 1998, he was Head of the Astronaut Office Robotics Branch. From 2000 on, he
was a member of the Astronaut Office EVA (Extravehicular Activity) Branch,
while maintaining a position as Lead ESA astronaut in Houston. During his
assignment in Houston, he also maintained an active duty status within the
Swiss Air Force with a rank as Captain, flying on Hawker Hunter, Northrop F-5E
"Tiger", and Pilatus PC-9 aircraft until end of 2004. He has logged
more than 6000 flight hours, 3500 of which in jet aircraft.
He retired
from ESA on March 31, 2007, and is currently professor at the Federal Institute
of Technology in Lausanne or EPFL (Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne)
where he teaches a course on “Space Technology and Operations”, and provides
assistance to students on various space related projects. He is also involved in the “Solar Impulse”
solar power aircraft program as Head of flight test operations.
He has
been a crewmember on four Space Shuttle flights, STS-46 in 1992 (EURECA
deployment and first test of TSS), STS-61 in 1993 (first servicing mission of
the Hubble Space Telescope), STS-75 in 1996 (second flight of TSS, and USMP-3
microgravity investigations), and STS-103 in 1999 (third servicing mission of
the Hubble Space Telescope). He has logged more than 1000 hours in space,
including a spacewalk of 8 hours 10 minutes duration to install new equipment
on the Hubble Space Telescope on STS-103.
He is a
recipient of Honorary Doctorates from EPFL, and the Universities of Geneva and
Basel.
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