NASA Continues Space Exploration Research With Undersea Lab

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Sept. 1, 2006

Katherine Trinidad
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-3749

Kylie Clem
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111

RELEASE: 06-309

NASA CONTINUES SPACE EXPLORATION RESEARCH WITH UNDERSEA LAB

NASA's third mission this year to an undersea laboratory off the 
Florida coast begins when four astronauts splash down Sept. 16.

Veteran space flyer astronaut Sandra H. Magnus will lead the crew on a 
seven-day undersea mission Sept. 16 - 22 onboard the National Oceanic 
and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Aquarius underwater 
laboratory. Army Lt. Col. Timothy L. Kopra, Army Col. Timothy J. 
Creamer and Air Force Maj. Robert L. Behnken round out the astronaut 
crew. Roger Garcia and Larry Ward of the University of North Carolina 
at Wilmington will provide engineering support inside the habitat. 
All four astronauts are training for possible assignment to missions 
to the International Space Station.

During the NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO) 11, 
astronauts will imitate moonwalks, testing concepts for mobility 
using various spacesuit configurations and weights to simulate lunar 
gravity. Techniques for communication, navigation, geological sample 
retrieval, construction and using remote-controlled robots on the 
moon's surface also will be tested.

"We continue to press the limits of our imaginations as we test 
operational concepts that may be used when we return to the moon," 
said NEEMO 11 Mission Director Marc Reagan. "Building on the NEEMO 9 
and 10 missions, we will explore new challenges and learn to overcome 
the inherent difficulties of living and working on the moon. These 
results will allow our designers and engineers to improve designs of 
habitats, robots and spacesuits."

Aquarius is owned and funded by NOAA and operated by the University of 
North Carolina at Wilmington's Undersea Research Center. The center 
is part of NOAA's Undersea Research Program. Aquarius hosts teams of 
scientists on research missions, usually 10 days long, to study 
science and management issues on its surrounding coral reef 
ecosystems.

Aquarius is a 45-foot-long, 13-foot-diameter complex three miles off 
Key Largo in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. The 
laboratory rests 62 feet beneath the surface. A shore-based mission 
control center in Florida monitors the habitat and crew. The NEEMO 11 
work will be monitored at NASA's Johnson Space Center's Exploration 
Planning Operations Center, Houston. This is the last NEEMO mission 
this year. More are planned in 2007.

Magnus flew to the International Space Station on shuttle mission 
STS-112 in October 2002. She used the station's robotic arm to help 
attach a new segment to the station's truss structure. Magnus was 
born in Belleville, Ill. She has a bachelor's in physics and a 
master's in electrical engineering from the University of 
Missouri-Rolla and a doctorate from the Georgia Institute of 
Technology, Atlanta.

Kopra was selected as an astronaut in 2000 and is assigned to the 
Space Station Operations Branch of the Astronaut Office. He was born 
in Austin,Texas. He holds a bachelor's from the U.S. Military 
Academy, West Point, N.Y., and a master's in aerospace engineering 
from the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Selected as an astronaut in 1998, Creamer works in the Robotics Branch 
of the Astronaut Office. Creamer considers Upper Marlboro, Md., his 
hometown. He has a bachelor's from Loyola College and a master's from 
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge.

Behnken was selected as an astronaut in 2000. He considers St. Ann, 
Mo., his hometown. He has bachelor's degrees in mechanical 
engineering and physics from Washington University, St. Louis, and a 
master's and doctorate in mechanical engineering from the California 
Institute of Technology, Pasadena, Calif. He is a graduate of the Air 
Force Test Pilot School, Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.

For interviews with the NEEMO 11 crew call the Johnson newsroom at 
281-483-5111. For more on NOAA, contact Fred Gorell, Silver Spring, 
Md., at 301-713-9444, ext. 181. Through NASA's Digital Learning 
Network (DLN), classrooms will be able to videoconference with 
Aquarius. Students will conduct experiments of their own before 
talking with the aquanauts. The pre-event activities are designed to 
complement the NEEMO 11 mission objectives.

For more information about NEEMO, including mission imagery, crew 
journals, and links to webcams and the Digital Learning Network, 
visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/neemo

	
-end-



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