Patrick Baudry

From The Space Library

Revision as of 16:53, 7 March 2013 by RobertG (Talk | contribs)
(diff) ←Older revision | Current revision (diff) | Newer revision→ (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search
Patrick Baudry

Patrick Baudry
Birth Name Patrick Baudry
Birth Date Mar 6 1946
Occupation CNES Astronaut, (Lieutenant Colonel, French Air Force)

Contents

[edit] Personal Data

Born March 6, 1946 in Douala (United Republic of Cameroon). Married. One child. Hobbies include mechanical sports, such as motorcycling and car racing. He also enjoys running marathons, playing squash, skiing, gun-firing, wind surfing, and sky-diving. Lieutenant Colonel Baudry is also a wine connoisseur.

[edit] Education

Master of Science in aeronautical engineering from French Air Force Academy "Ecole de L'Air."

[edit] Experience

Lieutenant Colonel Baudry completed flight training at Salon-de-Provence and Tours, France, receiving his wings in 1970. Served as a fighter pilot in Fighter Squadron 1/11 "Roussillon" on F100 and Jaguar, and completed numerous operational missions in several countries of Africa. He entered the "Empire Test Pilot School" at Boscomb Down, Great Britain, in 1978, and was awarded the Patuxent River Trophy at the completion of the course. He was assigned to the Flight Test Center in Bretigny-sur-Orge, France, in 1979, where he flew various test projects on fighter and attack-type aircraft which included flying the different types of Mirages, Jaguar, and Crusader. He has logged more than 4,000 hours flying time - 3,300 in jet aircraft - and has flown over 100 different types of aircraft - F100, F104, F4, A8, T33, Lightning, Harrier, Hunter, Canberra, Jaguar, all types of Mirages, Mystere 4, Vautour, and other aircraft. Lieutenant Colonel Baudry holds an airline transport pilot license.

[edit] Spaceflight Experience

NASA EXPERIENCE: Lieutenant Colonel Baudry flew as a payload specialist on STS-51G Discovery (June 17-24, 1985). STS-51G was launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, and returned to land at Edwards Air Force Base, California. The international crew aboard Discovery deployed communications satellites for Mexico (Morelos), the Arab League (Arabsat), and the United States (AT&T Telstar). They deployed and later retrieved the SPARTAN satellite, which performed 17 hours of x-ray astronomy experiments while separated from the Space Shuttle. In completing this flight, Lieutenant Colonel Baudry traveled 2.5 million miles in 112 Earth orbits, logging over 169 hours in space. CNES EXPERIENCE: Lieutenant Colonel Baudry became a CNES astronaut in June 1980. For two years, he trained at CNES and at Star City near Moscow. He was a member of the back-up crew of the French-Soviet mission and was trained for scientific experiments in the fields of physiology, biology, materials processing in space, and astronomy. Lieutenant Colonel Baudry is a CNES expert for manned space flight activities and participates in the analysis of decisions and study of definition for the future "Hermes" space aircraft.

[edit] Organizations

Association of European Astronauts; correspondent of the Air and Space Academy; and member of several wine tasters' confreries, such as "Chevaliers du Tastevin," "Jurade de St Emilion," and "Confrerie du Contemps."

[edit] Special Honours

Chevalier of the Legion of Honour; Chevalier of the National Merit Order; French Astronautics Medal; the Soviet Order of "Amitie des Peiples" and the Soviet Order of Gagarine.

[edit] Other Information

Jul-85

Category:Astronaut-Cosmonaut