NASA Astronaut Karen Nyberg Available for Interviews Before Space Station Mission

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April 30, 2013

Rachel Kraft 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1100 
rachel.h.kraft@xxxxxxxx 

Jay Bolden 
Johnson Space Center, Houston 
281-483-5111 
jay.e.bolden@xxxxxxxx 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M13-067

NASA ASTRONAUT KAREN NYBERG AVAILABLE FOR INTERVIEWS BEFORE SPACE STATION MISSION



WASHINGTON -- NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg, a Vining, Minn., native who 
is making final preparations for a launch to the International Space 
Station, will be available for live satellite interviews from 7- 8 
a.m. EDT Thursday, May 9. 

The interviews will originate from the Gagarin Cosmonaut Training 
Center in Star City, Russia. Before they start, NASA Television will 
air a video b-roll feed at 6:30 a.m., of Nyberg's mission training 
and previous spaceflight. 

To participate in the interviews, reporters should contact Seth 
Marcantel at 281-792-7515 no later than 3 p.m. Wednesday, May 8. 

Nyberg earned an undergraduate degree from the University of North 
Dakota and graduate and doctorate degrees from the University of 
Texas at Austin. A mechanical engineer by training, she served in 
various engineering roles at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston 
prior to being selected as an astronaut in 2000. Nyberg previously 
flew in space as a mission specialist aboard space shuttle Discovery 
on STS-124 in 2008. 

Nyberg will launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 4:31 
p.m. EDT May 28 aboard a Soyuz spacecraft along with Fyodor 
Yurchikhin of the Russian Federal Space Agency and Luca Parmitano of 
the European Space Agency. The trio is scheduled to return to Earth 
in November. 

This launch is the second time in two months a piloted Soyuz 
spacecraft will have launched and docked to the International Space 
Station within six hours. When the Soyuz arrives at the station, the 
crew will join Expedition 36 NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy, and 
Russian Federal Space Agency cosmonauts Alexander Misurkin and Pavel 
Vinogradov, who launched in March. The crew will participate in 
several hundred experiments that cross the fields of biology and 
biotechnology, physical science, and earth science during their 
mission, which will last nearly six months. 

NASA TV's Media Channel 103 will carry the b-roll and will be used to 
conduct the interviews. It is an MPEG-4 digital C-band signal, 
carried by QPSK/DVB-S modulation on satellite AMC-18C, transponder 
3C, at 105 degrees west longitude, with a downlink frequency of 3760 
MHz, vertical polarization, data rate of 38.80 MHz, symbol rate of 
28.0681 Mbps, and 3/4 FEC. A Digital Video Broadcast (DVB) compliant 
Integrated Receiver Decoder (IRD) is needed for reception. The 
Compression Format is MPEG-4, Video PID = 0x1031 hex / 4145 decimal, 
AC-3 Audio PID = 0x1035 hex /4149 decimal, MPEG I Layer II Audio PID 
= 0x1034 hex /4148 decimal. 

Nyberg's biography is available at: 

http://go.nasa.gov/np5ICw 

Follow Nyberg and other NASA astronauts via Twitter at: 

@AstroKarenN and @NASA_Astronauts 

For more information about Expedition 36 and 37, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/139pjnN 

For information about the International Space Station, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/station 

	
-end-



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