HOUSTON – The "8 Balls" have landed in NASA's center pocket.
On Tuesday, Aug. 20, eight new astronaut candidates — nicknamed the
"Eight Balls" — were formally welcomed to NASA's Johnson Space Center in
Houston, where they're set to begin two years of basic training.
"For more than 50 years, from the early days of Gemini and the Apollo
moon landings to the historic achievements of the 30-year space shuttle
era and today's International Space Station, the Johnson Space Center
has been home to America's human spaceflight program," Charles Bolden,
NASA Administrator and a former astronaut, said Tuesday morning at a
press conference. [Photos: NASA's 2013 Astronaut Class in Pictures]
"The new astronauts we're introducing today are critical to achieving
our ambitious goals," Bolden added. "They will help us continue to lead
the world in exploration, and they'll become role models for boys and
girls, men and women, from all over the world. Their journey begins now
and the nation, as it always has, will be right beside them reaching for
the stars."
Chosen in June from an applicant pool of more than 6,000, NASA's 21st astronaut class
includes four men (Josh Cassada, Victor Glover, Nick Hague and Andrew
Morgan) and four women (Christina Hammock, Nicole Mann, Anne McClain and
Jessica Meir).
"These next generation American astronauts will ... have an
opportunity to fly on new commercial space transportation systems that
are now under development," Bolden said. "More importantly, they will be
among those who plan and perhaps carry out first-ever human missions to
an asteroid and on to Mars."
"Of course, it all begins with preparing them for missions to the International Space Station," he said.
Tradition and training
Following a long-standing NASA tradition, the "Eight Balls" received their nickname from the prior class of astronauts, "The Chumps" selected in 2009, who are now beginning to receive their first assignments to fly to the space station.
"The eight ball [in billiards or pool] is played last, and the hope
from the preceding class is that the [2013 astronaut candidates] will be
assigned after all of them [fly]," Bob Behnken, chief of the Astronaut
Office at Johnson Space Center, told collectSPACE.com.
It will be two years at the minimum before any member of the "Eight
Balls" will be eligible for a mission assignment. First, they must
undergo basic training.
"The eight of them will go through a wide range of new training
opportunities," Behnken said. "Some of them will have some familiarity
based on their prior military training, but the space business is new to
all of them, so I think they are going to have an exciting time."
The training will involve three primary activities.
The astronaut candidates, or "ascans," will be instructed on the
technical aspects of living and working aboard the space station.
They'll also tour NASA's facilities across the country, "so that the
class as a whole will have a good understanding of all the things that
go into making NASA as successful as it is," Behnken said.
First, though, they will be given flight training at the nearby
Ellington Field in Houston and, for some, at the Naval Air Station in
Pensacola, Fla., as well.
"They will also have T-38 [supersonic jet] training, where those who
already have an aviation background will hone their skills in the T-38
and those who do not will have the opportunity to get that aviation
background under their belt before they start supporting crews who are
on orbit," Behnken said.
Wide-eyed and open
"Our biggest responsibility is to learn from all these people
around us, from years and years of the history at NASA, so when the
baton is passed on to us, we are ready to go forward," Anne McClain told
collectSPACE.
Perhaps distinguishing the "Eight Balls" from the previous ascans is the open nature of their path forward.
At the same time they were being welcomed, NASA and 11 other
international space agencies released a "Global Exploration Roadmap,"
setting a united but generic vision for robotic and human missions to
near-Earth asteroids, the moon and Mars.
The roadmap identifies the locations the agencies want to pursue but
doesn't define the shape that the missions to reach those targets will
take.
"We are wide-eyed and we are open," Nicole Mann said. "We all have a
diverse background. We are ready to learn and train for whatever mission
that NASA puts forth for us."
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