Bryan D. O'Connor

Bryan Daniel O'Connor
Född6 september 1946
Orange, Kalifornien USA
Tid i rymden15 dagar, 23 timmar, 18 minuter
UrvalsgruppAstronautgrupp 9
UppdragSTS-61-B, STS-40
Uppdrags­emblem

Bryan Daniel O'Connor, född 6 september 1946 i Orange, Kalifornien, är en amerikansk astronaut uttagen i astronautgrupp 9 den 19 maj 1980

Rymdfärder

Källor

”Biographical Data” (på engelska) (PDF). NASA. augusti 2011. https://www.nasa.gov/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/oconnor_bryan.pdf?emrc=aea4a1. Läst 5 maj 2024. 

Media som används på denna webbplats

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STS-61-B mission patch
This is the insignia designed by the STS-61B crewmembers to represent their November 1985 mission aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis, depicted here in earth orbit, making only its second space flight. The design is surrounded by the surnames of the seven crewmembers.
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United States astronaut Bryan D. O'Connor
Sts-40-patch.png

STS-40 Mission Insignia

The STS-40 patch makes a contemporary statement focusing on human beings living and working in space. Against a background of the universe, seven silver stars, interspersed about the orbital path of Columbia, represent the seven crew members. The orbiter's flight path forms a double-helix, designed to represent the DNA molecule common to all living creatures. In the words of a crew spokesman, ...(the helix) affirms the ceaseless expansion of human life and American involvement in space while simultaneously emphasizing the medical and biological studies to which this flight is dedicated. Above Columbia, the phrase Spacelab Life Sciences 1 defines both the Shuttle mission and its payload. Leonardo Da Vinci's Vitruvian man, silhouetted against the blue darkness of the heavens, is in the upper center portion of the patch. With one foot on Earth and arms extended to touch Shuttle's orbit, the crew feels, he serves as a powerful embodiment of the extension of human inquiry from the boundaries of Earth to the limitless laboratory of space. Sturdily poised amid the stars, he serves to link scentists on Earth to the scientists in space asserting the harmony of efforts which produce meaningful scientific spaceflight missions. A brilliant red and yellow Earth limb (center) links Earth to space as it radiates from a native American symbol for the sun. At the frontier of space, the traditional symbol for the sun vividly links America's past to America's future, the crew states. Beneath the orbiting Shuttle, darkness of night rests peacefully over the United States. Drawn by artist Sean Collins, the STS 40 Space Shuttle patch was designed by the crewmembers for the flight.