Biographical Data |
National Aeronautics and Space Administration |
Lyndon
B. Johnson Space Center Houston, Texas 77058 |
Byron K. Lichtenberg, Sc. D.
Payload Specialist
PERSONAL DATA: Born February 19, 1948 in Stroudsburg, PA. Married with 5 children, 2 adopted Chinese daughters. He is a U.S. citizen.
EDUCATION: Sc.D., Westminster College (honorary); Sc.D., biomedical engineering, MIT (1979); S.M., mechanical engineering, MIT (1975); Sc.B., aerospace engineering, Brown University (1969).
AWARDS: Awarded the NASA Space Flight Medal (two awards), the AIAA Haley Space Flight Award, and the FAI Komorov Award.
ORGANIZATIONS: Founding Member, Association of Space Explorers, X-Prize Foundation, and the International Space University. Member, User Panel for National Space Biomedical Research Institute, Tau Beta Pi (honorary engineering society), and Sigma Xi (honorary scientific society).
EXPERIENCE: From 1978 to 1984 he was a Research the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT)/Canadian Vestibular experiments on Spacelab 1,
Spacelab D-1, Spacelab SLS-1 and SLS-2, and a Co-principal investigator for
the Mental Workload and Performance experiment flown on IML-1 to assess human-computer
workstation characteristics for the Space Station.
He was a Founder of Payload Systems, Inc., a company that has provided hardware
and flight support for MODE and MACE experiments for the Space Shuttle and ISS.
They also were the first commercial user of the Mir Space Station, flying protein
crystal growth experiments to Mir in the early 1990's. He is now President
of Zero Gravity Corporation, founded to make parabolic, weightless aircraft
flights available to the general public. He was an Air Force fighter pilot for
23 years, flying the F-4, F-100, and A-10. Survived 238 combat missions during
the Vietnam War, and received 2 Distinguished Flying Crosses, 10 Air Medals,
and numerous other decorations. Currently flies as a Captain for a major Airline.
SPACE FLIGHT EXPERIENCE: Lichtenberg was the first Payload specialist. He flew on Spacelab-1 (STS-9) mission (10 days in 1983), conducted multiple experiments in life sciences, materials sciences, Earth observations, astronomy and solar physics, upper atmosphere and plasma physics. His second flight was ATLAS-1 (STS-45) Spacelab mission (9 days in 1992); conducted 13 experiments in Atmospheric sciences and astronomy. He has flown 310 orbits, and has logged 468 hours in space.
OCTOBER 2002
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