Mercury,
January/February 2001 Table of Contents
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Image
credit: NASA/Johnson Space Center |
Swiss
astrophysicist-turned-astronaut Claude Nicollier talks about life
on the Space Shuttle and how he and his crewmates saved the Hubble
Space Telescope.
by
John Alan Cohan
What
is it like to walk and work in space? How good is the food aboard
the Space Shuttle? What would happen to a spacewalking astronaut
if he or she were not wearing a spacesuit? To find out, read this
interview in the January/February 2001 issue of Mercury Magazine
with Swiss astronaut Claude Nicollier, a veteran of four Space Shuttle
missions. Nicollier, a member of the Astronomical Society of the
Pacific since 1978, discusses working, walking, eating, and sleeping
in space. He also talks about how he and three fellow spacewalkers
fixed the ailing Hubble Space Telescope. Nicollier is a former Swiss
Air Force pilot and professional astronomer. If you enjoy this interview,
you can see Nicollier in person. He will be a special guest speaker
at the ASP's 2001 Annual Meeting in St. Paul, Minnesota on the weekend
of July 13-15.
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