Veteran Astronaut Carl Walz Leaves NASA

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Dec. 04, 2008

Grey Hautaluoma/Ashley Edwards 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0668/1756 
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx, ashley.edwards-1@xxxxxxxx 

Nicole Cloutier-Lemasters 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 
nicole.cloutier-1@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-318

VETERAN ASTRONAUT CARL WALZ LEAVES NASA

HOUSTON -- NASA astronaut Carl Walz is leaving the agency to take a 
job in the private sector. 

Walz most recently served as director for the Advanced Capabilities 
Division in the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington. In the division, he played a key role in 
developing technologies that will lead to greater capabilities in 
robotic and human exploration of the solar system. He oversaw work in 
many fields, including nuclear power and propulsion, human adaptation 
to spaceflight, and lunar exploration. Many of these programs will 
help humans return to the moon and develop a sustained presence 
there. 

"NASA owes a great debt to Carl Walz for his service as an astronaut 
and the expertise and perspective he has shared with us in the 
Advanced Capabilities Division," said Doug Cooke, associate 
administrator for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate. "The 
legacy of his leadership will be strongly felt in the next generation 
of manned space missions." 

A veteran of four space shuttle missions and one International Space 
Station expedition, Walz spent 231 days in space. He and fellow 
astronaut Dan Bursch held the U.S. spaceflight endurance record of 
196 days in space until April 2007. 

Expedition 4, his last mission, launched aboard space shuttle 
Endeavour in December 2001. Walz, one of the station's earliest 
inhabitants, set up equipment and experiments for the orbiting 
laboratory. He also completed two spacewalks during the mission, one 
in a Russian Orlan suit to outfit the Russian-supplied docking 
compartment and one in a U.S. spacesuit to prepare the station for 
its first truss segment. His spacewalks lasted a total of 11 hours, 
52 minutes. 

A retired U.S. Air Force Colonel, Walz also flew on STS-51 in 
September 1993, STS-65 in July 1994 and STS-79 in September 1996. 

Walz and the STS-51 crew deployed the U.S. Advanced Communications 
Technology Satellite and the Shuttle Pallet Satellite. He also took a 
seven-hour spacewalk to evaluate tools for the Hubble Space Telescope 
servicing mission during that flight. 

During STS-65, Walz and the crew worked in the second International 
Microgravity Laboratory spacelab module and conducted more than 80 
materials and life sciences experiments. That mission completed 236 
orbits of Earth, traveling 6.1 million miles and setting a new flight 
duration record for the shuttle program. 

On STS-79, the seven-member crew docked with the Russian Mir station 
and set a record for docked mass in space. That mission also 
completed a crew transfer, provided vital supplies to the Mir, and 
conducted important research and technology demonstrations. 
NASA selected Walz as an astronaut in January 1990. In addition to his 
flights, he served in a variety of technical and management positions 
within the Astronaut Office in Houston. 

For Walz's complete biography, visit: 



http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/walz.html 


For more information about NASA's Exploration programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/exploration 

	
-end-



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