John L. Phillips

John L. Phillips
John L. Phillips
Född15 april 1951
Fort Belvoir, Virginia
Tid i rymden190 dagar, 21 timmar, 54 minuter
UrvalsgruppAstronautgrupp 16
UppdragSTS-100, Sojuz TMA-6, Expedition 11, STS-119
Uppdrags­emblemSts-100-patch.png Expedition 11 insignia.svg STS-119 Patch.svg

John Lynch Phillips, född 15 april 1951, är en amerikansk astronaut uttagen i astronautgrupp 16 den 5 december 1996.

Rymdfärder


Media som används på denna webbplats

Astronaut.svg
Författare/Upphovsman: Viktorvoigt, Licens: CC BY-SA 3.0
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Astronaut John Phillips
STS-119 Patch.svg
The shape of the STS-119/15A patch comes from the shape of a solar array viewed at an angle. The International Space Station (ISS), which is the destination of the mission, is placed accordingly in the center of the patch just below the gold astronaut symbol. The gold solar array of the ISS highlights the main cargo and task of STS-119/15A -- the installation of the S6 truss segment and deployment of S6's solar arrays, the last to be delivered to the ISS. The surnames of the crew members are denoted on the outer band of the patch. The 17 white stars on the patch represent, in the crew's words, "the enormous sacrifice the crews of Apollo 1, Challenger, and Columbia have given to our space program." The U.S. flag flowing into the space shuttle signifies the support the people of the United States have given our space program over the years, along with pride the U.S. astronauts have in representing the United States on this mission.
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STS-100 Patch
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ISS Expedition 11 insignia.
The emblem of the eleventh expedition to the International Space Station (ISS) emphasizes the roles of the United States and the Russian Federation in the multinational ISS partnership. The two rocket plumes, in the style of the flags of these two nations, represent the Russian Soyuz vehicles and the American Space Shuttles. The ISS image shows the configuration of the orbiting Station at the start of the expedition, with docked Soyuz and Progress vehicles and the huge American solar panels. The names of the two crew members are shown on the margin of the patch. ISS Commander Sergei Krikalev and John Phillips, NASA ISS science officer and flight engineer, are expected to launch on a Soyuz vehicle and to be in orbit during the return to flight of the Space Shuttle. The crew explains, “The beauty of our home planet and the vivid contrasts of the space environment are shown by the blue and green Earth with the Space Station orbiting overhead, and by the bright stars, dark sky, and dazzling sun.”