|
|
Browse All
:
Images by Claude Nicollier of Johnson Space Center (JSC)
|
Printer Friendly |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier i
| Title |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training |
| Description |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training. View is of Nicollier and other trainees in personal floatation devices waiting for rescue. |
| Date |
09.04.1980 |
|
Astronaut Claude Nicollier i
| Title |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training |
| Description |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training. View is of Nicollier in one-man life raft. |
| Date |
09.04.1980 |
|
Offical portrait of ESA Payl
| Title |
Offical portrait of ESA Payload Specialist Claud Nicollier |
| Description |
Offical portrait of ESA Payload Specialist Claude Nicollier wearing blue shuttle flight suit. |
| Date |
06.29.1981 |
|
Portrait view of Astronaut C
| Title |
Portrait view of Astronaut Claude Nicollier during water egress training |
| Description |
Portrait view of Astronaut Claude Nicollier during water egress training at Homestead Air Force Base, Florida. |
| Date |
09.04.1980 |
|
ESA Mission Specialist Claud
| Title |
ESA Mission Specialist Claude Nicollier in SAIL simulator |
| Description |
ESA Mission Specialist Claude Nicollier seated in the commanders seat in the shuttle cockpit mock-up in the SAIL simulator. |
| Date |
09.04.1983 |
|
European Space Agency (ESA)
| Title |
European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist Nicollier trains in JSC's WETF |
| Description |
European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier (left) is briefed by Randall S. McDaniel on Space Shuttle extravehicular activity (EVA) tools and equipment prior to donning an extravehicular mobility unit and participating in an underwater EVA simulation in JSC's Weightless Environment Training Facility (WETF) Bldg 29 pool. Nicollier is holding the EMU mini workstation. Other equipment on the table includes EVA tool caddies and EVA crewmember safety tethers. |
| Date |
09.23.1987 |
|
View of Astronaut candidate
| Title |
View of Astronaut candidate Claude Nicollier during training Vance AFB |
| Description |
Portrait view of Astronaut candidate Claude Nicollier standing with his camera during training at Vance Air Force Base, Oklahoma. |
| Date |
08.18.1980 |
|
STS-103 crew return at build
johnsonspacecentermediaarchi
Photographic documentation s
s99-16049
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| date |
1999-12-29 |
| creator |
NASA |
| identifier |
s99-16049 |
|
Official portrait of the STS
johnsonspacecentermediaarchi
The crewmembers assigned to
s46-s-002
| mediatype |
IMAGE |
| mediatype |
image |
| creator |
NASA |
| identifier |
s46-s-002 |
|
| General Description |
STS-103 Shuttle Mission Imagery |
|
| General Description |
STS-103 Shuttle Mission Imagery |
|
| General Description |
STS-103 Shuttle Mission Imagery |
|
The STS-103 crew pose for a
| Description |
The STS-103 crew pose for a group portrait with their families and loved ones on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. They are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. From left to right, the crew members are Mission Specialists John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), Claude Nicollier of Switzerland, Jean-François Clervoy of France, and Steven L. Smith, Pilot Scott J. Kelly, and Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Mission Specialist J
| Description |
STS-103 Mission Specialist Jean-François Clervoy of France exhibits his holiday spirit on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr., Pilot Scott J. Kelly, and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), and Claude Nicollier of Switzerland. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Mission Specialist C
| Description |
STS-103 Mission Specialist C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.) holds one of his children on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base, as his wife, Rhonda, looks on. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr., Pilot Scott J. Kelly, and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), Claude Nicollier of Switzerland and Jean-François Clervoy of France. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Mission Specialist C
| Description |
STS-103 Mission Specialist Claude Nicollier of Switzerland and his wife, Susana, beam at the camera on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr., Pilot Scott J. Kelly, and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), and Jean-François Clervoy of France. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Commander Curtis L.
| Description |
STS-103 Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr. and his fiancee, Ann Brickert, smile for the camera on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Pilot Scott J. Kelly and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), Claude Nicollier of Switzerland and Jean-François Clervoy of France. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Pilot Scott J. Kelly
| Description |
STS-103 Pilot Scott J. Kelly holds his daughter as he talks to Mission Specialists and fellow crew members Jean-François Clervoy of France and Steven L. Smith on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr. and Mission Specialists C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), and Claude Nicollier of Switzerland. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
Amid a flurry of activity, S
| Description |
Amid a flurry of activity, STS-103 Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr. disembarks from the bus which brought him to the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Pilot Scott J. Kelly and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), Claude Nicollier of Switzerland and Jean-François Clervoy of France. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Payload Commander St
| Description |
STS-103 Payload Commander Steven L. Smith and his wife, Peggy, smile for the camera on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr., Pilot Scott J. Kelly, and Mission Specialists C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), Claude Nicollier of Switzerland and Jean-François Clervoy of France. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-103 Mission Specialist J
| Description |
STS-103 Mission Specialist John M. Grunsfeld (Ph.D.), with his wife, Carol, and their children, smiles for the camera on the runway at Patrick Air Force Base. The STS-103 crew and their families are preparing to board an airplane that will return them to their home base at the Johnson Space Center in Houston following the successful completion of their mission. Discovery landed in darkness the previous evening, Dec. 27, on runway 33 at KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility at 7:00:47 p.m. EST. This was the first time that a Shuttle crew spent the Christmas holiday in space. The other STS-103 crew members are Commander Curtis L. Brown Jr., Pilot Scott J. Kelly, and Mission Specialists Steven L. Smith, C. Michael Foale (Ph.D.), Claude Nicollier of Switzerland and Jean-François Clervoy of France. The STS-103 mission supplied the Hubble Space Telescope with six new gyroscopes, six new voltage/temperature improvement kits, a new onboard computer, a new solid state recorder and new data transmitter, and a new fine guidance sensor along with new insulation on parts of the orbiting telescope. This was the 96th flight in the Space Shuttle program and the 27th for the orbiter Discovery |
| Release Date |
12/28/1999 |
|
STS-46 Payload Specialist Ma
| Title |
STS-46 Payload Specialist Malerba and MS Nicollier prepare for JSC training |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba (left) and European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier, wearing their launch and entry suits (LESs), take a break from an emergency egress training session held in JSC's Mockup and Integration Laboratory (MAIL) Bldg 9. |
| Date Taken |
1992-03-11 |
|
STS-46 crewmembers participa
| Title |
STS-46 crewmembers participate in Fixed Base (FB) SMS training at JSC |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, Pilot Andrew M. Allen hands Mission Specialist (MS) and Payload Commander (PLC) Jeffrey A. Hoffman checklists from middeck locker MF43E during training session in JSC's fixed base (FB) shuttle mission simulator (SMS) located in Mission Simulation and Training Facility Bldg 5. European Space Agency (ESA) MS Claude Nicollier outfitted with communications kit assembly headset (HDST) and equipment looks beyond Hoffman to the opposite side of the middeck. |
| Date Taken |
1992-03-16 |
|
STS-46 crewmembers and backu
| Title |
STS-46 crewmembers and backup payload specialist in JSC WETF egress training |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, Pilot Andrew M. Allen, wearing launch and entry suit (LES) and launch and entry helment (LEH), is assisted by training support personnel as he prepares to simulate a parachute glide into water (the pool) during a launch emergency egress (bailout) simulation in JSC's Weightless Environment Training Facility Bldg 29. Allen holds onto the parachute straps before he is hoisted over the pool. Also in LES gear and waiting along the poolside are (left to right) backup Italian Payload Specialist Umberto Guidoni, Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba, and European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier. SCUBA-equipped divers in the pool are seen at the bottom of the frame listening to instructions. |
| Date Taken |
1992-04-24 |
|
STS-46 crewmembers during wa
| Title |
STS-46 crewmembers during water egress training in JSC's WETF Bldg 29 |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier (right) and Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba (left), seated at the pool's side, listen to instructions before participating in a launch emergency egress (bailout) simulation in JSC's Weightless Environment Training Facility (WETF) Bldg 29. The two participants are wearing launch and entry suits (LESs). |
| Date Taken |
1992-04-24 |
|
STS-46 crewmembers during wa
| Title |
STS-46 crewmembers during water egress training in JSC's WETF Bldg 29 |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier (left) and backup Italian Payload Specialist Umberto Guidoni, seated at the pool's side, relax before participating in a launch emergency egress (bailout) simulation in JSC's Weightless Environment Training Facility (WETF) Bldg 29. The two participants are wearing launch and entry suits (LESs) during the pretest briefing. |
| Date Taken |
1992-04-24 |
|
STS-46 MS Nicollier and Payl
| Title |
STS-46 MS Nicollier and Payload Specialist Malerba during JSC egress training |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier (left) and Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba, wearing launch and entry suits (LESs) and launch and entry helmets (LEHs), pose on the poolside of JSC's Weightless Environment Training Facility (WETF) Bldg 29. The two crewmembers are preparing for a launch emergency egress (bailout) simulation during which they will be dropped into the WETF pool. After landing in the water they will test crew escape system (CES) equipment and flotation devices. |
| Date Taken |
1992-04-24 |
|
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier in l
| Title |
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier in life raft during water egress training at JSC WETF |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier, wearing launch and entry suit (LES) and launch and entry helmet (LEH), floats in a one-person life raft during a launch emergency egress (bailout) simulation conducted in JSC's Weightless Environment Training Facility (WETF) Bldg 29 pool. |
| Date Taken |
1992-04-24 |
|
STS-46 Atlantis, OV-104, cre
| Title |
STS-46 Atlantis, OV-104, crew participates in fire training at JSC |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, crewmembers participate in fire fighting and fire training exercises in JSC's Fire Training Pit located across from the Gilruth Center Bldg 207. Lined up along fire hoses and spraying water at the blazing fire pit are: (front to back in the foreground) European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier, directing the hose nozzle, MS and Payload Commander (PLC) Jeffrey A. Hoffman, MS Marsha S. Ivins (pink cap), and MS Franklin R. Chang-Diaz, and (front to back in the background) Commander Loren J. Shriver, Pilot Andrew M. Allen, backup Italian Payload Specialist Umberto Guidoni, and Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba. A fire fighter training instructor stands between the two lines of crewmembers and the two hoses. |
| Date Taken |
1992-05-20 |
|
STS-46 Payload Specialist Ma
| Title |
STS-46 Payload Specialist Malerba uses extinguisher during JSC firefighting |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba shoots fire extinguisher spray at the base of a blazing fire during fire fighting and fire training exercises at JSC's Fire Training Pit located across from the Gilruth Center Bldg 207. Behind Malerba are the fire fighting training instructor, firemen, and European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier, holding a camcorder. |
| Date Taken |
1992-05-20 |
|
STS-46 crewmembers handle wa
| Title |
STS-46 crewmembers handle water hoses during fire training at JSC's Fire Pit |
| Description |
STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, crewmembers, directing the spray of two water hoses, approach a blaze in JSC's Fire Training Pit located across from the Gilruth Center Bldg 207. Manning the hose in the foreground are Commander Loren J. Shriver (left) and Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba. Holding a second hose are European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier and MS Franklin R. Chang-Diaz who is aiming nozzle at the fire. Between the water hoses is a fire fighting training instructor. In the distance JSC's water tower and building facilities can be seen. |
| Date Taken |
1992-05-20 |
|
Official portrait of the STS
| Title |
Official portrait of the STS-46 Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, crew |
| Description |
The crewmembers assigned to NASA's STS-46 mission pose with seven flags that represent participation on the flight. Commander Loren J. Shriver (right), holding launch and entry helmet (LEH), and Pilot Andrew M. Allen (left), also holding LEH, are seated in the front. Standing behind them and wearing launch and entry suits (LESs) are (left to right) Mission Specialist (MS) Marsha S. Ivins, MS Claude Nicollier (representing the European Space Agency (ESA)), MS and Payload Commander (PLC) Jeffrey A. Hoffman, MS Franklin R. Chang-Diaz, and Payload Specialist Franco Malerba (flying for the Italian Space Agency (ASI)). The flags (left to right) represent the United States of America (USA), Costa Rica (Chang-Diaz's native country), Italy, Switzerland (Nicollier's homeland), NASA, ESA, and ASI. Portrait made by NASA JSC photographer Robert L. Walck. |
| Date Taken |
1992-07-31 |
|
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier on O
| Title |
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier on OV-104's aft flight deck during EURECA deployment |
| Description |
STS-46 European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier takes a break from European Retrievable Carrier 1L (EURECA-1L) pre-deployment checkout procedures to pose for picture on the aft flight deck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. Nicollier is standing in front of the onorbit station control panels with the aft flight deck viewing window W9 appearing behind him. (OV-104's vertical tail is seen outside the window). Above Nicollier's head is overhead window W7 with the EURECA-1L grappled by the remote manipulator system (RMS) end effector visible outside. The crewman optical alignment sight (COAS) is mounted on the inside frame of W7. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 Commander Shriver and
| Title |
STS-46 Commander Shriver and ESA MS Nicollier on OV-104's aft flight deck |
| Description |
STS-46 Commander Loren J. Shriver (right) and European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier pose on the aft flight deck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. Nicollier steadies himself near a tiny Swiss flag and a photograph (displayed in viewing window W9) of the Matterhorn, a popular peak on the Swiss-Italian border. Window shades are in place in both aft viewing windows (W9 and W10) and in overhead window W7 for specific intravehicular (IVA) operations. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 crew, wearing LESs, p
| Title |
STS-46 crew, wearing LESs, prepares for deorbit on OV-104's flight deck |
| Description |
STS-46 crewmembers, wearing launch and entry suits (LESs) and launch and entry helmets (LEHs), are seated on the flight deck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. They review checklist procedures as they prepare for deorbit sequence and landing. At the far left, at the pilots station is Pilot Andrew M. Allen. Behind Allen is European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier in a mission specialists seat on the aft flight deck. Next to Nicollier is MS Marsha S. Ivins. Just out of the frame at left is Commander Loren J. Shriver who guided OV-104 in for its Florida landing. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier with
| Title |
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier with TOP experiment on OV-104's aft flight deck |
| Description |
STS-46 European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier, wearing headset (HDST) and a headband with a penlight flashlight attached, operates onorbit station panel A6 controls on the aft flight deck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. A camera equipped with image intensifiers is pointed through a window shade covering attached to overhead window W7 in front of and above Nicollier's head. Nicollier is conducting the Tether Optical Phenomena (TOP) experiment. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 crewmembers work on O
| Title |
STS-46 crewmembers work on OV-104's aft flight deck |
| Description |
STS-46 crewmembers work on the aft flight deck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104, during operations with the Tethered Satellite System 1 (TSS-1). Pictured are (left to right): Mission Specialist (MS) Franklin R. Chang-Diaz, shirtless, Commander Loren J. Shriver at onorbit station controls reviewing checklist, European Space Agency (ESA) MS Claude Nicollier at onorbit station controls, Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba at the payload station controls, and Pilot Andrew M. Allen perched on headrest of the commanders seat. MS Marsha S. Ivins used a 35mm camera with a 16mm lens to take this picture. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier and
| Title |
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier and PLC Hoffman pose on OV-104's aft flight deck |
| Description |
STS-46 European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier (left) and MS and Payload Commander (PLC) Jeffrey A. Hoffman pose in front of the onorbit station controls on the aft flight deck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. The overhead windows W7 and W8 appear above their heads and the aft flight deck viewing windows W9 and W10 behind them. Hoffman and Nicollier have been training together for a dozen years at JSC. Hoffman was an astronaut candidate in 1978 and Nicollier accompanied a group of trainees in 1980. Note the partially devoured chocolate Space Shuttle floating near the two. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 crew poses for onboar
| Title |
STS-46 crew poses for onboard (in-space) portrait on OV-104's middeck |
| Description |
STS-46 crewmembers pose for onboard (in-space) portrait on the middeck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. In the rear are (left to right) Commander Loren J. Shriver, Pilot Andrew M. Allen, and Mission Specialist (MS) Franklin R. Chang-Diaz. In the front are (left to right) European Space Agency (ESA) MS Claude Nicollier, MS and Payload Commander (PLC) Jeffrey A. Hoffman, MS Marsha S. Ivins, and Italian Payload Specialist Franco Malerba. Note that the crewmembers are positioned parallel to the middeck floor with the sleep station (starboard side of the middeck) appearing in the background. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier cond
| Title |
STS-46 ESA MS Nicollier conducts IFM on OV-104's waste collection system |
| Description |
STS-46 European Space Agency (ESA) Mission Specialist (MS) Claude Nicollier, wearing goggles, face mask, and rubber gloves, reviews inflight maintenance (IFM) checklist procedures before starting waste collection system (WCS) fan separator repair. One of two fan separators used to transfer waster water from the waste management compartment (WMC) to the waste water tank has failed. The suspected accumulation of water in the separator was believed to have occurred during a test dumping of waste water at a lower than normal pressure to evaluate the performance of new nozzles. The WMC is located on the middeck of Atlantis, Orbiter Vehicle (OV) 104. |
| Date Taken |
1992-08-08 |
|
Astronaut Claude Nicollier i
| Title |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training |
| Description |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training. View is of Nicollier in one-man life raft. |
| Date Taken |
1980-09-04 |
|
View of Astronaut candidate
| Title |
View of Astronaut candidate Claude Nicollier during training Vance AFB |
| Description |
Portrait view of Astronaut candidate Claude Nicollier standing with his camera during training at Vance Air Force Base, Oklahoma. |
| Date Taken |
1980-08-18 |
|
Portrait view of Astronaut C
| Title |
Portrait view of Astronaut Claude Nicollier during water egress training |
| Description |
Portrait view of Astronaut Claude Nicollier during water egress training at Homestead Air Force Base, Florida. |
| Date Taken |
1980-09-04 |
|
Astronaut Claude Nicollier i
| Title |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training |
| Description |
Astronaut Claude Nicollier in water egress training. View is of Nicollier and other trainees in personal floatation devices waiting for rescue. |
| Date Taken |
1980-09-04 |
|
Offical portrait of ESA Payl
| Title |
Offical portrait of ESA Payload Specialist Claud Nicollier |
| Description |
Offical portrait of ESA Payload Specialist Claude Nicollier wearing blue shuttle flight suit. |
| Date Taken |
1981-06-29 |
|
Mission Specialists eligible
| Title |
Mission Specialists eligible for the 1983 flight viewing Spacelab model |
| Description |
The first Mission Specialists eligible for the 1983 flight, viewing a Spacelab model are, from left to right: Hubbo Ockels, Netherlands, Ulf Merbold, West Germany, Michael Lampton, USA, Claude Nicollier, European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut training, and Byron Lichtenhberg, USA. |
| Date Taken |
1982-09-29 |
|
STS-61 crew utilizing Virtua
| Title |
STS-61 crew utilizing Virtual Reality in training for HST repair mission |
| Description |
Astronaut Jeffrey A. Hoffman, one of four crewmembers for STS-61 that will conduct scheduled spacewalks during the flight, wears a special helmet and gloves designed to assist in proper positioning near the telescope while on the end of the robot arm. Crewmembers are utilizing a new virtual reality training aid which assists in refining positioning patterns for Space Shuttle Endeavour's Remote Manipulator System (RMS) (36890), Astronaut Claude Nicollier looks at a computer display of the Shuttle's robot arm movements as Thomas D. Akers and Kathryn C. Thornton, mission specialists look on. Nicollier will be responsible for maneuvering the astronauts while they stand in a foot restraint on the end of the RMS arm (36891,36894), Hoffman wears a special helmet and gloves designed to assist in proper positioning near the telescope while on the end of the robot arm (35892), Nicollier looks at a computer display of the Shuttle's robot arm movements as Akers looks on (36893), While (l-r) Astron |
| Date Taken |
1993-06-21 |
|
STS-61 crew utilizing Virtua
| Title |
STS-61 crew utilizing Virtual Reality in training for HST repair mission |
| Description |
Astronaut Jeffrey A. Hoffman, one of four crewmembers for STS-61 that will conduct scheduled spacewalks during the flight, wears a special helmet and gloves designed to assist in proper positioning near the telescope while on the end of the robot arm. Crewmembers are utilizing a new virtual reality training aid which assists in refining positioning patterns for Space Shuttle Endeavour's Remote Manipulator System (RMS) (36890), Astronaut Claude Nicollier looks at a computer display of the Shuttle's robot arm movements as Thomas D. Akers and Kathryn C. Thornton, mission specialists look on. Nicollier will be responsible for maneuvering the astronauts while they stand in a foot restraint on the end of the RMS arm (36891,36894), Hoffman wears a special helmet and gloves designed to assist in proper positioning near the telescope while on the end of the robot arm (35892), Nicollier looks at a computer display of the Shuttle's robot arm movements as Akers looks on (36893), While (l-r) Astron |
| Date Taken |
1993-06-21 |
|
STS-61 crewmembers training
| Title |
STS-61 crewmembers training with the Remote Manipulator System |
| Description |
The Remote Manipulator System (RMS) eases a mannequin representing an astronaut into position for an STS-61 Hubble Space Telescope (HST) servicing task in the Space Shuttle mockup and integration laboratory at JSC (35699, 35703), Wide-angle view of the RMS easing a mannequin into position for work on the HST mock-up in bldg 9N (35700-1), Swiss scientist Claude Nicollier, mission specialist, works the control of the RMS during a training session in the manipulator development facility (MDF) in JSC's Shuttle mock-up and integration laboratory. Astronaut Kenneth D. Bowersox (left), pilot, is among the other crewmembers in training for the STS-61 HST servicing mission (35702). |
| Date Taken |
1993-06-08 |
|
STS-61 crew utilizing Virtua
| Title |
STS-61 crew utilizing Virtual Reality in training for HST repair mission |
| Description |
Astronaut Jeffrey A. Hoffman, one of four crewmembers for STS-61 that will conduct scheduled spacewalks during the flight, wears a special helmet and gloves designed to assist in proper positioning near the telescope while on the end of the robot arm. Crewmembers are utilizing a new virtual reality training aid which assists in refining positioning patterns for Space Shuttle Endeavour's Remote Manipulator System (RMS) (36890), Astronaut Claude Nicollier looks at a computer display of the Shuttle's robot arm movements as Thomas D. Akers and Kathryn C. Thornton, mission specialists look on. Nicollier will be responsible for maneuvering the astronauts while they stand in a foot restraint on the end of the RMS arm (36891,36894), Hoffman wears a special helmet and gloves designed to assist in proper positioning near the telescope while on the end of the robot arm (35892), Nicollier looks at a computer display of the Shuttle's robot arm movements as Akers looks on (36893), While (l-r) Astron |
| Date Taken |
1993-06-21 |
|
|