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Biography of
Claude
Nicollier

Claude Nicollier (born September
2, 1944) is the first astronaut from Switzerland on space and has flown on
several Space Shuttle missions.
Biography
He was born in Vevey, Switzerland, graduating from Gymnase de Lausanne
(high school), Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1962; received a bachelor of
science in physics from the University of Lausanne in 1970 and a master of
science degree in astrophysics from the University of Geneva in 1975. Also
graduated as a Swiss Air Force pilot in 1966, an airline pilot in 1974,
and a test pilot in 1988 (Empire Test Pilot’s School, Boscombe Down,
United Kingdom).
From 1970 to 1973, Nicollier worked as a graduate scientist with the
Institute of Astronomy at Lausanne University and at the Geneva
Observatory. He then joined the Swiss Air Transport School in Zurich and
was assigned as a DC-9 pilot for Swissair, concurrently participating
part-time in research activities of the Geneva Observatory. At the end of
1976 he accepted a Fellowship at the European Space Agency’s (ESA) Space
Science Department at Noordwijk, Netherlands, where he worked as a
research scientist in various airborne infrared astronomy programs. In
July 1978 he was selected by ESA as a member of the first group of
European astronauts. Under agreement between ESA and NASA he joined the
NASA astronaut candidates selected in May 1980 for astronaut training as a
mission specialist.
His technical assignments in the
Astronaut Office have included flight software verification in the Shuttle
Avionics Integration Laboratory (SAIL), participation in the development
of retrieval techniques for the Tethered Satellite System (TSS), Remote
Manipulator System (RMS), and International Space Station (ISS) robotics
support. From the Spring of 1996 to the end of 1998, he was Head of the
Astronaut Office Robotics Branch. From the year 2000 to date, he was
assigned to the Astronaut Office EVA (Extravehicular Activity) Branch,
while maintaining a position as Lead ESA astronaut in Houston.
His life
He is married to Susana Perez of
Monterrey, Mexico. They have two daughters, Maya and Marina. He enjoys
mountain climbing, flying, and photography. His father, Georges Nicollier,
resides in La Tour-de-Peilz, Switzerland.
He is member of the Swiss Astronomical Society, the Astronomical Society
of the Pacific, the Swiss Air Force Officers Society (AVIA), and the Swiss
Academy of Engineering Sciences and fellow of the British Interplanetary
Society. He is also an honorary member of the Swiss Aero Club, and the
Swiss Society of Engineers and Architects.
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Flights
Nicollier holds a commission as
captain in the Swiss Air Force. He has logged 5,600 hours flying
time including 4,000 hours in jet aircraft.
A veteran of four space flights, Nicollier has logged more than 1,000
hours in space including 1 space walk totaling 8 hours and 10 minutes. He
served on STS-46 in 1992, STS-61 in 1993, STS-75 in 1996, and STS-103 in
1999.

Honors
NASA Distinguished Service Medal (2001), Four NASA Space Flight Medals
(1992, 1993, 1996, 1999), Prix d'honneur de la Fondation Pro Aero,
Switzerland (1992), Yuri Gagarin Gold Medal from the International
Aeronautical Federation (1994), Silver Medal from the Académie Nationale
de l'Air et de l'Espace, France (1994), Collier Trophy (awarded to the
crew of STS-61) from the National Aeronautics Association (1994), Prix de
l'Université de Lausanne (1994), honorary doctorates from the Swiss
Federal Institute of Technology, Lausanne, and the Geneva University (both
in 1994). Appointed professor at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology,
Lausanne, in November 1994.
Sources : Wikipedia
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