NASA Astronaut Group 19
2004 human spaceflight selection of 11 candidates; "the Peacocks" From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NASA Astronaut Group 19 was a NASA spaceflight team that saw the training of two pilots, six mission specialists, three educator mission specialists to become NASA astronauts. These 11 astronauts began training in 2004. This was the last group to fly the Space Shuttle.
Pilots
- Randolph Bresnik (2 flights)[1]
- STS-129 (Atlantis)
- Soyuz MS-05
- Flight engineer/Commander, ISS Expedition 52/53
- James Dutton (1 flight)[2]
Mission specialists
- Christopher Cassidy – Chief of the Astronaut Office 2015-2017 (3 flights)[3][4]
- STS-127 (Endeavour)
- Soyuz TMA-08M
- Flight engineer, ISS Expedition 35/36
- Soyuz MS-16
- Flight engineer/Commander, ISS Expedition 62/63
- José M. Hernández (1 flight)[5]
- Robert S. Kimbrough (3 flights)[6]
- STS-126 (Endeavour)
- Soyuz MS-02
- Flight engineer/Commander, ISS Expedition 49/50
- Commander, SpaceX Crew-2
- Flight engineer, Expedition 65
- Thomas Marshburn (3 flights)[7]
- STS-127 (Endeavour)
- Soyuz TMA-07M
- Flight engineer, ISS Expedition 34/35
- Pilot (SpaceX Crew-3)
- Robert Satcher (1 flight)[8]
- Shannon Walker (2 flights)[9]
- Soyuz TMA-19
- Flight engineer, ISS Expedition 24/25
- SpaceX Crew 1
- Flight engineer/commander, ISS Expedition 64/65
- Soyuz TMA-19
Educator mission specialists
- Joseph M. Acaba – Chief of the Astronaut Office 2023–Present (3 flights)[10]
- Mission specialist, STS-119 (Discovery)
- Soyuz TMA-04M
- Flight engineer, ISS Expedition 31/32
- Soyuz MS-06
- Flight engineer, ISS Expedition 53/54
- Richard R. Arnold (2 flights)[11]
- Mission specialist, STS-119 (Discovery)
- Soyuz MS-08
- Flight engineer, ISS Expedition 55/56
- Dorothy Metcalf-Lindenburger (1 flight)[12]
See also
References
External links
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