Autor Wątek: Dale Allan Gardner (1948-2014)  (Przeczytany 487 razy)

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Dale Allan Gardner (1948-2014)
« dnia: Marca 04, 2019, 22:33 »
Dale Allan Gardner (08.11.1948-19.02.2014)

19 lutego 2014  zmarł Dale Allan Gardner



Brał udział w 3. misji  Challengera http://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=800.msg121755#msg121755
i w 2. wyprawie Discovery https://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/shuttle/shuttlemissions/archives/sts-51A.html   

125. człowiek w kosmosie.
Jego dwa loty trwały łącznie 14d 00h 53m 38s.
Wykonał dwa spacery kosmiczne o łącznym czasie trwania wynoszącym 12g 14m.

https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/gardner_dale.pdf

http://www.spacefacts.de/bios/astronauts/english/gardner_dale.htm
http://www.astronautix.com/g/gardner.html
https://www.worldspaceflight.com/bios/g/gardner-d.php

https://mek.kosmo.cz/bio/usa/00126.htm
http://www.kozmo-data.sk/kozmonauti/gardner-dale-allan.html
https://www.astronaut.ru/crossroad/126.htm
https://www.april12.eu/usaastron/gardner125ru.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_Gardner
https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_Gardner
https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_A._Gardner
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_Gardner
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dale_Gardner

https://nasa.fandom.com/wiki/Dale_Gardner

https://airandspace.si.edu/stories/editorial/remembering-dale-allan-gardner
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/28/us/dale-gardner-astronaut-who-helped-corral-wayward-satellites-dies-at-65.html
https://www.smh.com.au/national/dale-gardner-astronaut-who-lived-the-jetpack-fantasy-20140423-zqy2j.html
https://www.forumastronautico.it/t/astronauta-dale-gardner/33468


S83-39696 (5 Sept 1983) --- The five member astronaut crew of the Space Shuttle Challenger for STS-8 responds to a comment made by President Ronald Reagan during a post flight telephone conversation with the chief executive. The five astronauts earlier today landed the reusable spacecraft at Edwards Air Force Base in California and were flown to JSC via NASA aircraft. Richard H. Truly, center, is crew commander. Pilot for the six day flight was Daniel C. Brandenstein, second left. The mission specialist were Guion S. Bluford, left: Dr. William S. Thornton, second right, and Dale A. Gardner, right. Photo credit: NASA Curator: JSC PAO Web Team | Responsible NASA Official: Amiko Kaud

Trening:


Start do misji STS-51A


EVA w czasie misji STS-51A


Lądowanie misji STS-51A


Podsumowania misji STS-51A:




https://www.britannica.com/biography/Dale-Gardner
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/10758394/Dale-Gardner-obituary.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2014/02/28/us/dale-gardner-astronaut-who-helped-corral-wayward-satellites-dies-at-65.html
https://www.universetoday.com/109626/dale-gardner-astronaut-who-rescued-a-satellite-with-a-jetpack-dead-at-65/
http://www.spacesafetymagazine.com/news/lost-spacefarers-astronaut-dale-gardner-cosmonaut-valery-kubasov-die/

Artykuły astronautyczne

Zmarł Dale Gardner
BY MICHAŁ MOROZ ON 21 LUTEGO 2014


Dale Gardner / Credits: NASA

W wieku 65 lat zmarł Dale Gardner, były astronauta NASA. Brał udział w dwóch lotach wahadłowców na początku lat osiemdziesiątych.

Zanim został wybrany do korpusu astronautów pracował jako pilot wojskowy w amerykańskiej marynarce wojennej. Trening w NASA rozpoczął w 1978 roku. Na orbitę trafił pięć lat później, podczas lotu STS-8. Głównym celem misji Challengera było wyniesienie indyjskiego satelity INSAT-1B. Astronauci trenowali również pracę z ramieniem wahadłowca przenosząc ważącą niemal 4 tony strukturę Payload Flight Test Article.

Podczas drugiego lotu, STS-51-A, Gardner wykonał dwa spacery kosmiczne. Discovery wyniósł na orbitę dwa satelity telekomunikacyjne, Anik D2 oraz Syncom IV-1. Celem misji było także przechwycenie dwóch satelitów, Palapa B2 oraz Westar 6, które umieszczone zostały na niewłaściwej orbicie. To właśnie podczas tej misji wykonano jedno z bardziej znanych zdjęć programu wahadłowców, Dale Gardnera trzymającego tablicę z napisem “For Sale”.




Szanse na trzeci lot astronauty przekreśliła katastrofa Challengera. Gardner był wybrany do misji STS-62-A, pierwszej misji wahadłowca z kosmodromu Vandenberg. Później nie zrealizowano już żadnego lotu załogowego z Zachodniego Wybrzeża.

W połowie 1986 roku opuścił szeregi NASA i wrócił do US NAVY. Od lat dziewięćdziesiątych pracował w przedsiębiorstwie TRW Inc.


https://kosmonauta.net/2014/02/2014-02-21-gardner/#prettyPhoto
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Odp: Dale Allan Gardner (1948-2014)
« Odpowiedź #1 dnia: Marca 04, 2019, 22:33 »
Dale Gardner, jetpack-flying astronaut who salvaged satellites, dies at 65


NASA astronaut Dale Gardner holds up a "For Sale" sign in a nod to the malfunctioning satellites he and Joe Allen salvaged during space shuttle Discovery's STS-51A mission in 1984. (NASA)

February 21, 2014 — NASA astronaut Dale Gardner, who in 1984 achieved the world's first space salvage during his second shuttle mission, died on Wednesday (Feb. 19). He was 65.

Gardner made history becoming the last of six astronauts to use the manned maneuvering unit (MMU) jetpack as he worked to return two malfunctioning satellites to Earth.

He died Wednesday from a sudden brain aneurysm. News of his passing was shared via social media on Thursday, with the Association of Space Explorers and the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida noting his death.

One of the so-called "Thirty-Five New Guys" (or "TFNG") who NASA recruited in 1978 to train for its then-new space shuttle, Gardner flew twice as a mission specialist aboard the orbiters Challenger and Discovery in August 1983 and November 1984, respectively.

Gardner's first spaceflight blazed a new path through the black sky as the first shuttle mission to launch and land at night. The six-day STS-8 mission, which marked the third flight of space shuttle Challenger, deployed INSAT-1-B, a communications and weather satellite for India, while also testing the orbiter's robotic arm and, in a first, the space-to-ground communications using a new Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS).



NASA portrait of STS-8 and -51A astronaut Dale Gardner. (NASA)

Gardner's STS-8 crewmates included commander Richard Truly, who had piloted the shuttle's second test flight, pilot Dan Brandenstein, and fellow mission specialists William Thornton and Guy Bluford, the latter being the first African American in space. It was only the second mission to fly with a crew of five, the largest contingent launched aboard a spacecraft at the time.

Gardner returned to space with the second flight of shuttle Discovery as a member of the STS-51A crew. The eight-day mission first launched two Canadian communication satellites and then, in a move that made history, retrieved two malfunctioning satellites for their return to Earth. The Wester 6 satellite for Western Union and Indonesian Palpa B2 satellite were deployed on a previous shuttle flight but had failed to reach their proper orbits due to failed motors.

As commander Frederick Hauck, pilot David Walker, and mission specialist Anna Fisher looked on from inside, Joe Allen and Gardner embarked on a pair of spacewalks to capture and secure the wayward satellites. The twice-done feat, which required the spacewalkers to manually hold the satellites in the orbiter's payload bay, included Allen, and then Gardner donning the MMU jetpack, marking the last times to date that astronauts flew untethered through open space.

On the successful completion of their salvage work and in a humorous nod to the malfunctioning satellites, Gardner revealed a hand-drawn "For Sale" sign, posing for a photo that would become one of the most iconic shots of the 30-year space shuttle program.



Dale Gardner, wearing a Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU) jetpack captures the wayward Wester 6 satellite during STS-51A. (NASA)

Landing Nov. 16, 1984, Gardner logged a two-mission total of 14 days and 52 minutes orbiting the Earth, including 12 hours and 14 minutes performing two spacewalks.

Dale Allan Gardner was born Nov. 8, 1948, in Fairmount, Minnesota, and was raised in Sherburn, Minnesota and in Savanna, Ill., but considered Clinton, Iowa his hometown. Graduating in 1970 from the University of Illinois, Gardner entered active duty in the United States Navy and was assigned to flight officer training in Florida and Georgia.

Awarded his officer wings in May 1971, Gardner reported to the Naval Air Test Center at Patuxent River, Maryland where he was involved in the initial tests and evaluations of the F-14 "Tomcat" fighter jet. He then served with the Navy's first operational F-14 squadron during two tours of the Pacific aboard the USS Enterprise.

From December 1976 until his selection as a member of NASA's eighth class of astronauts in 1978, Gardner was assigned to the Air Test and Evaluation Squadron at Pt. Mugu, California. After reporting to Johnson Space Center in Houston and finishing a year of basic training, Gardner served as the astronaut project manager for the shuttle's flight software prior to the vehicle's first flight in 1981.

Following his two spaceflights, Gardner was training to fly a third time to space when the shuttle Challenger was lost in January 1986. Assigned to the first crew to launch into a polar orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the mission — and West Coast shuttle launch capability — was canceled in the wake of the tragedy.



Dale Gardner holds up a sign for the Navy onboard space shuttle Challenger during the STS-8 mission in 1983. (NASA)

In October 1986, Gardner retired from the astronaut corps and was assigned by the Navy to U.S. Space Command in Colorado Springs. For two years he acted as the deputy chief of Space Control Operations in Cheyenne Mountain before being promoted to Captain and becoming deputy director for Space Control at Peterson Air Force Base. In that position, Gardner's responsibilities included surveilling and tracking all man-made objects in Earth orbit and the protection of U.S. and friendly space systems.

In October 1990, Gardner departed the Navy to accept a position with TRW, Inc. in Colorado Springs as a program manager involved in the development of both civilian and military space and defense high technology programs. In December 2003 he joined the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, where until 2013 he was managing the applied research and development activities for biofuels, fuel cells and advanced transportation within the laboratory.

A recipient of the NASA Space Flight Medal, Gardner was also awarded the Defense Superior Service Medal and the Distinguished Flying Cross, among other honors.

Gardner had two children with his first wife Sue Ticusan, who he divorced in 1992. Gardner is survived by his wife Sherry, his daughter Lisa, and two stepchildren, Erika and Christopher. He was preceded in death by his son Todd, and his father.


http://www.collectspace.com/news/news-022114a-astronaut-dale-gardner-obituary.html
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Odp: Dale Allan Gardner (1948-2014)
« Odpowiedź #2 dnia: Listopada 08, 2024, 22:46 »
Astronauta w dniu startu do drugiego lotu kosmicznego obchodził 36. urodziny.
Cytuj
8 novembre 1984
40 ans Décollage de STS-51A
Dale Gardner (1948-2014) fête son anniversaire le même jour.
C'était le sujet d'un de mes concours, et aussi dans mon article sur les anniversaires spatiaux voir dans le fil du tweet cité) 😉
https://x.com/spacemen1969/status/1854661609668382967
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Odp: Dale Allan Gardner (1948-2014)
« Odpowiedź #3 dnia: Stycznia 05, 2025, 17:29 »
Minęły dziesiątki lat od operacji odzyskania niesprawnych satelitów i sprowadzenia ich na Ziemię.
https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/capturing-satellite-november-1984/
https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=34076.0
Cytuj
NASA History Office @NASAhistory Post 10:00 PM · Nov 14, 2017
Astronaut Dale Gardner was the last to use the Manned Maneuvering Unit (MMU) #OTD in 1984 when he and Joe Allen recovered satellite Westar 6 during STS-51A. (Gif is sped up)
https://twitter.com/NASAhistory/status/930540894306144259
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Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

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Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

Odp: Dale Allan Gardner (1948-2014)
« Odpowiedź #4 dnia: Stycznia 05, 2025, 17:54 »