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Roberto Vittori

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Nationality
  
Italian

Mission insignia
  

Selection
  
1998 ESA Group

First space flight
  
Soyuz TM-33


Time in space
  
35d 12h 26m

Role
  
Astronaut

Status
  
Active

Name
  
Roberto Vittori

Other occupation
  
Test pilot

Roberto Vittori Astronaut Biography Roberto Vittori

Born
  
15 October 1964 (age 59) Viterbo, Lazio, Italy (
1964-10-15
)

Rank
  
Colonnello, Aeronautica Militare Italiana (Italian Air Force)

Space missions
  
Soyuz TMA-6, Soyuz TM-33, Soyuz TMA-5, Soyuz TM-34, STS-134

Education
  
University of Naples Federico II

Similar People
  
Gregory Chamitoff, Andrew J Feustel, Michael Fincke, Gregory H Johnson, Mark Kelly

Space agency
  
European Space Agency

Astronaut roberto vittori nasa


Roberto Vittori (born 15 October 1964 in Viterbo) is an Italian air force officer and an ESA astronaut. After graduating from the Italian Accademia Aeronautica in 1989, Vittori flew in the Italian Air Force. He then trained as a test pilot in the United States.

Contents

Roberto Vittori 4633jpg

In 1998, Vittori was selected by the ESA to join the European Astronaut Corps. Since then, he has participated in three spaceflights: the Soyuz TM-34/33 and Soyuz TMA-6/5 taxi flights to the ISS, as well as STS-134, the penultimate mission of the American Space Shuttle Program. He was the last non-American to fly aboard the shuttle.

Roberto Vittori httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons11

Roberto vittori s third mission to the iss


Career

Roberto Vittori ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori to fly to ISS in 2010

He graduated from the Italian Air Force Academy in 1989 and trained in the United States. He flew the Tornado in the Italian Air Force before graduating in 1995 from the U.S. Naval Test Pilot School at Patuxent River, Maryland where he was the first in his class. He served at the Italian Test Center as a project pilot for the development of the new European aircraft, the EF2000. Vittori flew Tornado GR1 aircraft with the 155th Squadron, 50th Wing, Piacenza (Italy) from 1991 to 1994. During that time, he qualified for day/night air-to-air refuelling as well as a formation leader. He has logged over 1700 hours in over 40 different aircraft including F-104, F-18, AMX, M-2000, G-222 and P-180.

Roberto Vittori Space in Images 2002 04 Portrait of Roberto Vittori

In August 1998, after selection by ESA to join the European Astronaut Corps, he reported to the Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Following a period of training and evaluation, Vittori served in various technical assignments within the NASA Astronaut Office.

Soyuz TM-34

Roberto Vittori Italian astronauts Roberto Vittori ASI Agenzia

From April 25 to May 5, 2002, Vittori participated in the Soyuz TM-34 taxi-flight to the International Space Station (ISS), under an agreement between the Russian Rosaviakosmos, the Italian Space Agency, ASI and ESA. During his stay aboard ISS he worked alongside the resident crew overseeing four European scientific experiments. The mission successfully delivered a new "lifeboat" to the Station for use by resident crews in the event of an on-board emergency. Vittori returned to Earth aboard Soyuz TM-33.

Soyuz TMA-6

On 15 April 2005 Vittori participated in a second taxi-flight to the International Space Station (ISS), Soyuz TMA-6, returning to Earth on 24 April in the Soyuz TMA-5 capsule. He became the first European astronaut to visit the ISS twice and conducted experiments in upper limb fatigue in astronauts and germination of herbaceous plant seeds for possible space nutrition.

STS-134

Vittori was a Mission Specialist for NASA Space Shuttle mission STS-134 in 2011. He is the last non-US astronaut to fly on the Shuttle.

Personal life

Vittori has three sons.

Vittori moved to Washington, DC in 2013 and achieved some attention for filing thousands of complaints about airport noise with the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, some 75 percent of total complaints received. In 2017, he decided to move away from the flight path for Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

References

Roberto Vittori Wikipedia