Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
NASA Solarsystem Collection
title:
Kathryn Sullivan
description:
An unofficial sustained American aviation altitude record for women was set July 1, 1979, by astronaut candidate Kathryn D. Sullivan in a NASA WB-57F reconnaissance aircraft.

The record altitude of 63,300 feet was reached during a four-hour flight. Sullivan, in a high altitude pressure suit, operated color infrared cameras and multispectral scanning equipment as the WB-57F spent one and one-half hours of the Big Bend area of West Texas. Piloting the aircraft was Jim Korkowski, one of the NASA Airborne Instrumentation Research Program Pilots. The flight was out of Ellington AFB near Houston.

Sullivan, who has a doctorate in geology, was selected in 1978 as one of 35 astronaut candidates training for the Shuttle program. She trained to be a mission specialist and flights in the WB-57F were training in preparation for her assignments on the Shuttle. Sullivan later served as a mission specialist on STS-41G, STS-31, and STS-45.

*Image Credit*: NASA
date:
07.01.1979
keywords:
Solar System Exploration
keywords:
SSE
keywords:
Space
keywords:
NASA
keywords:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
keywords:
JPL
keywords:
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
keywords:
Planets
facet_where:
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
facet_where:
Texas
facet_where:
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL)
facet_when:
July 1, 1979
facet_when:
1978
facet_when:
07-01-1979
facet_when_year:
1979
facet_when_year:
1978
facet_who:
Kathryn Sullivan
UID:
SPD-SLRSY-1627
original url:

Kathryn Sullivan