 |
|

Next profile | Previous
profile | September/October Contents
| Gazette home


Astronaut Candidate: His Preparation
for Space Walk Began on Locust Walk
It was 5 A.M., and most of Garrett Reisman's classmates were
still sleeping. But the mechanical engineering student was wide awake,
having crept to the top of one High Rise to glimpse the Space Shuttle
flying overhead. "I have very vivid memories of that -- and now,"
says an enthused Dr. Reisman, EAS/W'91, nearly a decade later,
"I get to see the view from the other side." He was selected
from 2,600 applicants to be one of the 25 members of the astronaut class
of 1998 -- the first Penn undergraduate alumnus to earn this distinction.
(Dr. Michael L. Gernhardt, GEng'83, Gr'91, is the only other Penn
graduate to become an astronaut in the program's history.)
Last month, Reisman began what will be at least a year
of intensive academic and physical training and evaluation at the Johnson
Space Center in Houston. Between hitting the books and learning about
the systems on the Space Shuttle and Space Station, "there's a lot
of fun stuff," notes Reisman, "like learning to fly all the
T-38 fighter jets and going up in a modified Boeing 747 [nicknamed 'the
vomit comet'], which basically goes into a nose-dive to simulate weightlessness."
Once he successfully completes training, he will receive a technical assignment
within the Astronaut Office and then wait to be assigned to a crew.
"It's been my dream since childhood," he says.
"I was always interested in space flight; I built model rockets and
I watched movies of the Apollo flights. But I first got serious about
it at Penn." Reisman credits three mentors for their help in reaching
his goal: Dr. Gregory Farrington, the former dean of the School of Engineering
and Applied Science; Dr. Joseph Bordogna, the Alfred Fitler Moore professor
and dean emeritus of the Engineering School; and Dr. William Hamilton,
director of the Management and Technology program.
After earning dual bachelor's degrees in economics and
mechanical engineering from Wharton and the Engineering School, Reisman
went on to earn his master's degree and doctorate in mechanical engineering
from the California Institute of Technology. He worked for the past year
and a half as a spacecraft guidance, navigation, and control engineer
at TRW's Space and Electronics Group in Redondo Beach, Calif.
Reisman believes his Penn experiences helped him stand
out as a finalist for the astronaut program. He told his interviewers
about participating on the first mechanical engineering team at Penn to
build a solar car for an intercollegiate competition. "There are
a lot of hands-on, quick fixes you have to come up with to keep the car
running. It's not dissimilar to the things they had to do to keep the
Mir running in space."

Next profile | Previous
profile | September/October Contents
| Gazette home

Copyright 1998 The Pennsylvania
Gazette Last modified 8/25/98
|
|