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Nicholas Patrick

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Nationality
  
British / American

Mission insignia
  

First space flight
  
STS-116

Status
  
Retired

Name
  
Nicholas Patrick

Space agency
  
NASA

Time in space
  
26d 14h 52m

Role
  
Engineer

Other occupation
  
Engineer

Selection
  
1998 NASA Group

Space missions
  
STS-116, STS-130


Nicholas Patrick wwwnasagovimagescontent162036mains9904988m

Born
  
November 19, 1964 (age 59) Saltburn-by-the-Sea, England, United Kingdom (
1964-11-19
)

Education
  
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harrow School, University of Cambridge, Trinity College, Cambridge

Similar People
  
Robert L Behnken, George D Zamka, Kathryn P Hire, Joan Higginbotham, Mark L Polansky

British astronaut nicholas patrick profiled on rodmcneil tv


Nicholas James MacDonald Patrick, Ph.D. (born 19 November 1964), is a British-American engineer and a former NASA astronaut. His flight on the 2006 Discovery STS-116 mission made him the fourth person born in the United Kingdom to go into space.

Contents

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Patrick was born in Saltburn-by-the-Sea in the North Riding of Yorkshire, England, in 1964. His mother came from the Isle of Skye in Scotland. He grew up in both London and Rye, New York, and eventually became a United States citizen in 1994. Patrick is married to a paediatrician originally from Peru and has three children.

Nicholas Patrick Astronaut Nicholas Patricks postNASA career collectSPACE Messages

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Education and early career

Nicholas Patrick Interview Nicholas Patrick NASA astronaut YouTube

Patrick was first educated at Harrow School and Trinity College, Cambridge (receiving an undergraduate degree in Engineering in 1986). During his university years, he learned to fly as a member of the Royal Air Force's Cambridge University Air Squadron. After Cambridge, he worked for four years as an engineer for the Aircraft Engines Division of General Electric, in Lynn, Massachusetts in the United States.

Nicholas Patrick Astronaut Biography Nicholas Patrick

Patrick then attended the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, receiving a master's degree (1990) and a PhD. (1996), both in Mechanical Engineering. Afterwards, he joined Boeing's Commercial Airplane Group in Seattle.

NASA career

Patrick was selected by NASA as an astronaut candidate in June 1998 and reported to NASA’s Johnson Space Center (JSC) for astronaut training in August 1998. His initial training included scientific and technical briefings, intensive instruction in Shuttle and International Space Station systems, and physiological, survival, and classroom training in preparation for T-38 flight.

Patrick has logged over 308 hours in space, having completed his first space mission as a member of the crew of STS-116 – a construction and logistics mission to the International Space Station. He occasionally serves as a CAPCOM; for example, he worked with the Orbit 2 team for STS-120.

Patrick notably put the finishing touches on the Tranquility node during STS-130.

In July 2004, Patrick served as an aquanaut during the NEEMO 6 mission aboard the Aquarius underwater laboratory, living and working underwater for ten days. In August 2007, he served as the commander of the NEEMO 13 mission, living underwater for another ten days.

Patrick retired from the NASA Astronaut Corps in May 2012.

NASA spaceflight experience

STS-116 Discovery ( 9–22 December 2006): The seven-member crew on this 12-day mission continued construction of the ISS outpost by adding the P5 spacer truss segment during the first of four spacewalks. The next two spacewalks rewired the station’s power system, preparing it to support the addition of European and Japanese science modules by future shuttle crews. The fourth spacewalk was added to allow the crew to coax and retract a stubborn solar panel to fold up accordion-style into its box. Discovery also delivered a new crew member and more than two tons of equipment and supplies to the station. Almost two tons of items no longer needed on the station returned to Earth with STS-116. Mission duration was 12 days, 20 hours and 45 minutes.

Owing to both his Scottish ancestry and his endorsement of the Careers Scotland Space School, Patrick requested a Scottish flag that had been flown at the Scottish Parliament to go with him on STS-116 Discovery. It is now kept on display at the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.

STS-130 Endeavour (8 to 21 February 2010): This mission launched at night, carrying the International Space Station’s final permanent modules: Tranquility and Cupola. Tranquility (or Node 3) is now the life-support hub of the station, containing exercise, water recycling and environmental control systems, while the Cupola provides the largest set of windows ever to grace a spacecraft. These seven windows, arranged in a hemisphere, provide a spectacular and panoramic view of our planet and a direct view of station robotic operations. During the 13-day, 18-hour mission, Endeavour and her six-member crew travelled more than 5.7 million miles and completed 217 orbits of the Earth, touching down at night at Kennedy Space Center, Florida.

Blue Origin career

Patrick joined Blue Origin in 2012. Patrick worked as a human integration architect at Blue Origin.

References

Nicholas Patrick Wikipedia