Jean-Pierre Haigneré
Jean-Pierre Haigneré (born 19 May 1948) is a French Air Force officer and a former CNES spationaut.
Jean-Pierre Haigneré | |
---|---|
Born | Paris, France | 19 May 1948
Status | Retired |
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Test Pilot |
Space career | |
CNES Spationaut | |
Rank | Brigadier General, French Air Force |
Time in space | 209d 12h 25min |
Selection | 1985 CNES Group 2, 1998 ESA Group |
Missions | Soyuz TM-17, Mir Altair, Soyuz TM-16, Soyuz TM-29, Mir-Perseus |
Mission insignia |
Jean-Pierre Haigneré was born in Paris, France and joined the French Air Force, where he trained as a test pilot.
He flew on two missions to the Mir space station in 1993 and 1999. The Mir Altair long-duration mission (186 days) in 1993 also included an EVA.[1] In addition to his duties at the European Space Agency, Jean-Pierre Haigneré is also involved in a European space tourism initiative, the Astronaute Club Européen (ACE), which he co-founded with Alain Dupas and Laurent Gathier.
Family
He is married to former French astronaut Claudie Haigneré. The asteroid 135268 Haigneré is named in their combined honour.
gollark: But these are big and not aesthetic.
gollark: Nobody was using it anyway.
gollark: Better idea: use fully automated factories to disassemble the Moon into monitors. Throw away actual ones with no repercussions!
gollark: BETTER business idea: furniture composed entirely of big Lego or magnetic cubes or something.
gollark: Position a trampoline below the window.
References
- http://www.spacefacts.de/bios/international/english/haignere_jean-pierre.htm Spacefacts biography of Jean-Pierre Haigneré
External links
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