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This website talks about Story Musgrave being a mission specialist at age 61, though he was a pilot on other shuttle flights.
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) One Earth, One Sky - IYA 2009 All moderation in purple |
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Dr. Musgrave was a mission specialist on his six Shuttle flights, not a pilot.
He is, however, a very experienced pilot outside of the Shuttle world (see his biography). A remarkable gentleman. |
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John Young was pilot ("commander" in NASA speak) of shuttle mission STS-9 in November 1983. He was 53 years old then.
He was the oldest astronaut pilot to fly a mission I know of, excepting Mike Melville. Melville qualifies as an astronaut by both USAF (50 miles) and FAI (100 km) standards. |
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Melville actually had to FLY his rocketplane. |
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Everything I need to know I learned through Googling. |
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Youngest American in space is still, incredibly, Eugene Cernan who first flew at the age of 30.
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Fiction has to be plausible. Reality is under no such constraint. |
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It´s funny. When I was informed of Armstrong´s age upon his landing on the Moon (39), I was appalled that grannies like him could even walk without a cane. The relativity of things... I was 7.
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There’s probably no God. Now stop worrying and enjoy your life. |
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It reminds me of a Tom Lehrer quote Quote:
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At night the stars put on a show for free (Carole King) One Earth, One Sky - IYA 2009 All moderation in purple |
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I agree that Melvill should be counted. He did more flying in those 30 minutes than most shuttle astronauts do during the whole flight (all by hand! recovering from a 283 deg/sec roll while going vertically up at mach 3, etc.).
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