Nick Hague

Tyler Nicklaus Hague
Nick Hague
Nick Hague
Född24 september 1975
USABelleville, Kansas
Barn2 st
UrvalsgruppAstronautgrupp 21[1]
UppdragSojuz MS-10,
Sojuz MS-12, Expedition 59/60
Uppdrags­emblem

Tyler Nicklaus "Nick" Hague, född 24 september 1975 i Belleville i Kansas, är en amerikansk astronaut uttagen i astronautgrupp 21.

Sojuz MS-10

Den 11 oktober 2018 sköts han upp tillsamman med den ryske kosmonauten Aleksej Ovtjinin för att delta i Expedition 57/58. Strax efter uppskjutningen uppstod problem med raketen och flygningen avbröts.[2]

Rymdfärder

Referenser

  1. ^ ”Nick Hague” (på engelska). NASA. Arkiverad från originalet den 1 april 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190401135014/https://www.nasa.gov/astronauts/biographies/tyler-nick-hague/. Läst 20 mars 2019. 
  2. ^ ”NASA” (på engelska). Twitter. NASA. 11 oktober 2018. https://twitter.com/NASA/status/1050316612304175104. Läst 20 mars 2019. 

Media som används på denna webbplats

ISS Expedition 59 Patch.svg
The Expedition 59 crew insignia
  • The Expedition 59 patch celebrates the International Space Station’s role as a microgravity science laboratory. The crew, made up of scientists, doctors, engineers and pilots, will conduct hundreds of experiments for the benefit of mankind and our fragile environment on planet Earth.
  • The patch shape depicts the cupola windows. Through these windows, astronauts have made many significant observations of Earth’s ecosystems and they have discovered and documented real-time events like volcanic eruptions and earthquakes.
  • The position of the Earth at the top of the patch depicts where the Earth would be seen by an astronaut from the cupola. It represents the explorers’ unique perspective on his or her home. The image at the center of the patch is the station itself, the largest single structure humans have ever put into space, an engineering marvel.
  • The station is overlaid on an atom, the basic building block of all matter. The atom has three electron orbits with the flags of Russia, the United States of America and Canada, representing the home countries of the Expedition 59 crew. Like electrons in an atom, international cooperation is the basic stabilizing force that enables large scale space exploration.
  • To achieve great deeds, humans from all across the globe must work together in peace with a shared vision. The Expedition 59 patch celebrates the massive scientific accomplishments of the space station while highlighting the importance of global teamwork in understanding our planet and continuing with bold exploration in the future.
Tyler N. Hague official portrait.jpg
Tyler N. (Nick) Hague, NASA astronaut candidate class of 2013.
ISS Expedition 60 Patch.svg
The Expedition 60 crew insignia
  • The Moon landing is one of the most extraordinary feats of humankind, an embodiment of ingenuity and desire for exploration. The patch of Expedition 60 commemorates the 50th anniversary of that landing: a constellation of three stars with the Moon superimposed forms the letter “L,” the Latin symbol for 50. The Moon is depicted as a waxing crescent, as it was on July 20, 1969.
  • The familiar silhouette of the International Space Station is visible, flying across the night sky. Stars, numerous and bright as seen from the space station, form the shape of an eagle in the same pose as on the iconic patch of the Apollo 11 mission. The sunrise represents the fact that we are still in the early stages of humanity’s exploration of space.
  • The hexagonal shape of the patch represents the space station's cupola, with the six points of the hexagon symbolizing the six crewmembers of Expedition 60. The names and nationalities are not present, as on the original Apollo 11 mission patch, to highlight that space missions – then, now, and in the future – are for Earth and all humankind.