Norishige Kanai

Norishige Kanai, M.D. (金井 宣茂, Kanai Norishige, born 5 December 1976) is a Japanese doctor and JAXA astronaut.[1]

Norishige Kanai
Born (1976-12-05) December 5, 1976
Tokyo, Japan
StatusActive
NationalityJapanese
OccupationPhysician
Space career
JAXA Astronaut
RankLieutenant, JMSDF
Time in space
168 days 5 hours 18 minutes
Selection2009 JAXA Group
Total EVAs
1
Total EVA time
5 hours 57 minutes
MissionsSoyuz MS-07 (Expedition 54/55)
Mission insignia

He is a lieutenant and Diving Medical Officer in the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (Medical Service Division, 1st Service School). He served as a crew member on board the International Space Station for Expedition 54/55, and returned to Earth on June 3 2018.

Personal Life

Kanai graduated from Toho High School, Chiba, Japan, in 1995. He received a doctorate in Medicine from National Defense Medical College in 2002.

He enjoys Iaidō [2] and other Japanese traditional martial arts, scuba diving, and traveling.

He is a member of the Japan Surgical Society and the Japanese Society of Hyperbaric and Undersea Medicine.

Career

Kanai was commissioned from the National Defense Medical College in 2002. From 2002 to 2004, he worked in the Department of Surgery at the National Defense Medical College Hospital. In 2004, he was assigned to Japan Self Defense Force Ohminato Hospital, Aomori, Japan. He completed the Diving Medicine Course and qualified as a Diving Medical Officer in 2004. He also completed the U.S. Navy Diving Medical Officer’s Course as an international military student at the Naval Diving & Salvage Training Center, Florida, and qualified as a Navy diver in 2006. From 2006 to 2008, he worked in the Department of Surgery at the National Defense Medical College Hospital. He was transferred to Japan Self Defense Force Hospital Kure, Hiroshima, Japan, in 2008. Kanai worked at the JMSDF 1st Service School from June to September 2009.

JAXA career

After his selection as an astronaut candidate by JAXA in September 2009, Kanai arrived at Johnson Space Center later that month for NASA astronaut training. As one of the fourteen members of the 20th NASA astronaut class, he participated in Astronaut Candidate Training which includes scientific and technical briefings, intensive instruction in ISS systems, Extravehicular Activity (EVA), robotics, physiological training, T-38 Talon flight training, and water and wilderness survival training. Kanai was certified as an ISS astronaut in July 2011.

In July 2015, he participated as an aquanaut in the NEEMO 20 crew.[3]

Expedition 54/55

In August 2015 JAXA announced his selection to the crew of Expedition 54/55 to the International Space Station, scheduled for launch in December 2017.[4] Kanai was launched on into space onboard Soyuz MS-07 on December 17, 2017 07:21 UTC.[5]

In January 2018 Kanai received publicity after mistakenly tweeting that he had grown "as much as 9 cm" taller due to the absence of gravity. Microgravity allows the vertebrae in astronauts' spines to spread apart; typical growth for astronauts in zero-gravity is two to five centimeters. A 9 cm growth spurt might hypothetically create problems, as the Soyuz spacecraft to take astronauts back to Earth has a limit on seating height. However, later Kanai remeasured and tweeted that he had apparently grown only 2 cm, saying "it was a measurement mistake (?)" [sic].[6][7]

gollark: I should offer an egg.
gollark: HONLU
gollark: You know, part of the reason the forums are aaaaaargh could be that the way the forum is structured (last updated thing most visible) encourages controversial stuff to go up and generally agreed-upon stuff to go down.]
gollark: 🗽
gollark: Great, isn't it...

References

  1. JAXA Selects An Additional Astronaut Candidate for ISS Crewmember - September 8, 2009 - JAXA web site
  2. Japanese Astronaut Hopes to Make Space Open for Everyone - December 19, 2017 - NHK web site
  3. "crew of NEEMO 20". 20 July 2015. Retrieved 29 January 2016.
  4. "Astronaut Norishige Kanai Selected as Member of ISS Expedition Crew". JAXA. 26 August 2015.
  5. Chris Gebhardt (December 17, 2017). "Soyuz MS-07 launches on final human mission of 2017". nasaspaceflight.com.
  6. "Growth spurt worries Japanese astronaut". BBC News. 2018. Retrieved 10 January 2018.
  7. "Japan astronaut sorry for 9cm growth error". BBC News. 2018. Retrieved 12 January 2018.
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