NASA, Army Place An @AstroAnnimal In Space
by U.S. Army Jason Cutshaw Space and Missile Defense Command /
Strategic Command
March 8, 2019
Five, four, three, two … once more a Soldier leads the way into
the final frontier.
Army astronaut Lt. Col. Anne C. McClain
successfully launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan,
aboard a Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft on December 3, 2018 for a six-month
mission aboard the International Space Station.
A Soyuz booster rocket launches
the Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan on December 3, 2018, Baikonur time, carrying
Expedition 58 Soyuz Commander Oleg Kononenko of Roscosmos,
Flight Engineer Anne McClain of NASA, and Flight Engineer
David Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) into
orbit to begin their six and a half month mission on the
International Space Station. (NASA photo by Aubrey Gemignani)
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“Army astronauts have a very proud legacy in the astronaut
program,” McClain said. “I can tell you that just like everywhere
else in the Army, the biggest attributes that we can bring to the
table are leadership and team skills, and those traits that I
learned in the Army as both a follower and as a leader working in
austere environments with small groups in high gain tasks where
lives are at risk have absolutely transferred over into my time at
NASA, and I think that is the best thing that we can bring to NASA.
“In the Army we talk a lot about leadership and team skills
because it is absolutely the force multiplier that makes us
successful,” she added. “What I learned in the Army, not just
academically, but what I learned to apply, was that my best role on
the team was enabling the success of everyone around me.”
McClain, alongside her crewmembers David Saint-Jacques from Canada
and Oleg Kononenko from Russia, launched from the cosmodrome’s
famous “Gagarin’s Start” launch pad. It is the same one where the
world’s first manmade satellite “Sputnik 1” launched from in 1957 as
well as the first human in space, Russian Cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, in
1961.
Expedition 58 Flight Engineer
Anne McClain of NASA speaks with friends and family after
having her Russian Sokol suit pressure checked in
preparation for her launch aboard the Soyuz MS-11 spacecraft
on December 3, 2018 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in
Kazakhstan. Launch of the Soyuz rocket is scheduled for the
same day and will carry McClain, Soyuz Commander Oleg
Kononenko of Roscosmos, and Flight Engineer David
Saint-Jacques of the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) into orbit
to begin their six and a half month mission on the
International Space Station. (NASA photo by Aubrey Gemignani)
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Following a six-hour journey, the crew made four orbits around
the Earth before docking the Soyuz to the station to begin their
mission on the orbital laboratory.
During her time aboard the
ISS, McClain will participate with her crew in facilitating some 250
research investigations and technology demonstrations not possible
on Earth. Among these, McClain is expected to take part in one of
the first “Tissues on Chips” investigation. The experiment will use
miniature models of living organ tissues on transparent microchips
to replicate the complex biological functions of specific organs.
Other scientific research projects underway during this mission
will cover a wide range of fields, including chemistry, computer
science, sociology, molecular biology, additive manufacturing and
nanosatellite engineering. The U.S. Army’s involvement in the
nation’s space program dates back to the launch of United States’
first satellite, Explorer 1, and the first U.S. astronaut was
launched on an Army rocket. Through the years, 18 Army astronauts
have been selected by NASA.
As a Soldier, McClain is assigned
to the U. S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command/Army Forces
Strategic Command’s NASA Astronaut Detachment and serves as a NASA
flight crew member and provides engineering expertise for human
interface with space systems.
McClain explained how the Army
helped hone her skills and said she hopes to be able to transition
that to where her presence on the team can enable others to achieve
more than they ever thought they could accomplish.
“I think
the most important thing is that we will always perform best at what
we are passionate about,” McClain said. “I think there is a common
stereotype that these are jet pilots from the Air Force and the Navy
that do this kind of thing. But what I realized was I was passionate
and I wanted to fly but I wanted to fly helicopters, and I wanted to
be with Soldiers and I wanted to be in the Army. That was my path.
“You look at my astronaut class, we have scientists and we have
engineers and we have people who have never been in the military.
The thing we have in common, all of us, is the pursuit of passion.
Follow your passion with the endstate of your goals in mind, but you
got to get up every morning loving what you do and there is a place
in the Army for every type of person.”
McClain’s space
adventure can and be followed on Twitter using @AstroAnnimal.
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