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  Astronaut Cady Coleman's post-NASA career

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Author Topic:   Astronaut Cady Coleman's post-NASA career
Robert Pearlman
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Posts: 42988
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 12-02-2016 01:56 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
From astronaut Cady Coleman (STS-73, STS-93, Soyuz TMA-20, ISS 26/27):
It's a big day for me today [Dec. 1, 2016]. After 33 years at NASA and in the U.S. Air Force, three space flights and 180 days in space, I'm leaving NASA!

NASA will always be my family, but I'm thrilled to be spending more time with my husband Josh and our son Jamey in Shelburne, Massachusetts, just in time for Jamey's last few years in high school. It's a scary but exciting leap to take... but I guess I've always loved these kinds of leaps!

Words can't express the respect and passion that I have for our NASA mission. I loved flying on the space shuttle, living on the International Space Station and seeing our Earth from those special vantage points. I'm so thankful to have been part of the NASA team that makes this possible.

I'd like to thank my friends and family for their support over these many years. Certainly Josh, Jamey and my stepson Josiah, but also my brothers and sisters who have supported me at every step so that I could play a role in exploration.

What's next? There is so much happening both here on Earth and in space... we'll have to see! I'll always be exploring, but I am thrilled to be doing it from a new launch pad, a little closer to home!

Kite
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Posts: 831
From: Northampton UK
Registered: Nov 2009

posted 12-02-2016 03:40 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for Kite     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
What a lovely message from Cady Coleman after a wonderful career at US Air Force and NASA. May I wish her a happy and long retirement and hope she finds new and exciting explorations here on Earth. I'm sure she will.

Astro Rich
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Posts: 133
From: Huntsville, Alabama
Registered: Feb 2014

posted 12-02-2016 03:46 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Astro Rich   Click Here to Email Astro Rich     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
I had the honor to meet Cady back in 2010, she is a class act.

Mike Dixon
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Posts: 1397
From: Kew, Victoria, Australia
Registered: May 2003

posted 12-02-2016 05:35 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Mike Dixon   Click Here to Email Mike Dixon     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Never met the lady (OZ and all that) but I know through Bryan McKay that she is a wonderful person. Good enough for me.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42988
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 12-08-2016 06:07 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
NASA release NASA release
Astronaut Cady Coleman Leaves NASA

After 24 years and three trips to space, astronaut Cady Coleman left NASA on Dec. 1. During her time at NASA, she flew on two space shuttle missions and spent six months aboard the International Space Station.

"Cady always brought a great deal of enthusiasm to her work here," said Chris Cassidy, chief of the Astronaut Office at NASA's Johnson Space Center. "We wish her the best in her future endeavors."

Coleman, a retired colonel in the U.S. Air Force, was born in Charleston, South Carolina. She earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry from Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1983 and a doctorate in polymer science and engineering from the University of Massachusetts in 1991. Commissioned as a second lieutenant in the US Air Force, she worked as a research chemist at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base before being selected as an astronaut in 1992.

Coleman's first journey to space came as a mission specialist in 1995, when space shuttle Columbia carried the US Microgravity Laboratory into space for its second mission on STS-73, a precursor mission to the space station. She returned for STS-93 in 1999, also on Columbia, as the lead mission specialist for the deployment of the Chandra X-ray Observatory. Chandra is still being used to detect X-ray emission from very hot regions of the universe, such as exploded stars, clusters of galaxies, and matter around black holes.

In December 2010, Coleman launched into space for a third time onboard a Russian Soyuz rocket, for a six-month stay onboard the space station, serving as the lead science officer, lead robotics officer and flight engineer for Expedition 26/27. Coleman provided onboard supervision of more than 100 science and technology experiments aboard the station. In addition, she and the Expedition 26/27 crew hosted a record number of visiting vehicles, including two space shuttles, three Russian Progress supply ships, a European Automated Transfer Vehicle and a Japanese H2 Transfer Vehicle.

Coleman spent a total of 180 days space. During her time on the ground at NASA, she served in a variety of roles within the Astronaut Office, including chief of robotics, lead for tile repair efforts after the Columbia accident and lead astronaut for integration of supply ships from NASA's commercial partners, SpaceX and Orbital ATK. Most recently, she led open-innovation and public-private partnership efforts for the Office of the Chief Technologist at NASA Headquarters.

Robert Pearlman
Editor

Posts: 42988
From: Houston, TX
Registered: Nov 1999

posted 01-30-2019 09:55 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for Robert Pearlman   Click Here to Email Robert Pearlman     Edit/Delete Message   Reply w/Quote
Arizona State University release
Astronaut Cady Coleman joins ASU as Global Explorer in Residence

After a 35-year career as an Air Force Officer, NASA scientist and astronaut for missions aboard the Space Shuttle and International Space Station, Cady Coleman has had the rare human privilege of seeing our tiny blue dot framed against the vast backdrop of space.

Above all, it's imbued her with a deep sense of being the first of a new generation of explorers.

"I feel very lucky to have had such amazing opportunities with NASA," Coleman said. "Flying in space and living on the space station was so meaningful to me. It was a magical place to live and work. Six months was a long time, but not long enough! I felt like a colonist, like one of the few people who go first, but will not be the last. When I got there, I realized space has always been our place, we just hadn't been there yet."

Now, she will enter Arizona State University's orbit to join the School of Earth and Space Exploration's new Interplanetary Initiative as its first "Global Explorer in Residence."

"I am thrilled to have Cady join us at ASU — we truly share the vision of an inclusive positive future for humankind, and there can't be a better ambassador for the message than Cady," said Lindy Elkins-Tanton, director of the School of Earth and Space Exploration and co-chair of the Interplanetary Initiative.

"To me, the most exciting aspect of my new position is that I am part of the Interplanetary Initiative that Lindy is running," Coleman said. "The initiative is bigger than any of us. It's a way of telling people that we are all part of the future."

Until now, Coleman has spent her entire career with NASA and the U.S. Air Force. During that time, Coleman went from being a polymer chemist to an astronaut to helping launch the Chandra X-ray space observatory, enabling scientists to make new discoveries. Coleman served as chief of robotics for the astronaut office at NASA, which included all robotic-arm operations and training for missions.

She first was attracted to join ASU because of her long friendship with Barbara Barrett. They initially met in 1988 as part of Barrett's work on the Commission for Women in the Military. They met again in the 1990s in Star City, Russia, and trained together for space station missions.

"She and I have stayed connected over the years because we are both passionate about many of the same things," Coleman said. "She invited me to give a speech for the Interplanetary Initiative in Los Angeles. That's how (ASU) President (Michael) Crow met me."

"I just find what ASU is doing to be very, very exciting," Coleman said. "Since leaving NASA, it's become important to me to use the legacy that I have for the power of good, for the power of the future."

Hurtling through space at 18,000 miles per hour aboard the Space Shuttle and International Space Station to perform science experiments and deploy observatories also gave her a new perspective on sustainability and the more than 7 billion people and 200-plus nations back on the Earth.

"Our future is not limited to just this planet, but beyond it as well," Coleman said.

"Microgravity gives us a lens to look at different physical processes: recycling air, recycling water, growing plants in places where conditions are difficult. Those are things that are important for the next steps in exploration but are also important solutions for sustainability down here on Earth," she said. "Without the excitement and compelling nature of space travel those things don't get addressed. It's a hopeful aspect of space travel for me."

In addition to ASU's leadership in sustainability research, she sees a similar space exploration spirit at ASU, through its missions to the asteroid Psyche, continuous presence on Mars, recent rendezvous of the asteroid Bennu and several student-led research experiences — including CubeSat missions back to the moon.

Coleman will perform her new ASU mission this spring while also maintaining her "home base" of Massachusetts, where she spends time with her son, Jamey, a high school senior, and her husband, Josh Simpson, a glass artist.

Already, she has reached out and gotten to know several of the ASU faculty.

"I'm excited to learn about the possibilities at ASU with respect to the programs that already exist and the wonderful people involved in them," Coleman said.

She is looking forward to further getting to know the ASU community this spring, and plans on giving public lectures (the first one is slated for March 28) and meeting with as many people as possible.

Coleman is also a flautist and once had an opportunity, on April 12, 2011, to jam with the rock group Jethro Tull during a special concert held in honor of the 50th anniversary of Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin's first space flight. Only Coleman, in a bit of concert theatrics, was hovering above the Earth aboard the ISS while Ian Anderson kept the crowd enthralled back on terra firma in Russia.

Because of these experiences, she is also focused on how she can make the intersection between STEM education, artists, scientists and the humanities to help make a difference for ASU's future generations of explorers.

"By shining a light on my own experiences, I'm hoping to empower other people to take on the world in whatever field they are passionate about," she said. "It's really true that individual people can make a difference. I'm glad to be a part of making this happen at ASU."

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