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News > Moon landing jump starts general's own space legacy
 
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Moon landing jump starts general's own space legacy

Posted 3/26/2013 Email story   Print story

    


by Desiree N. Palacios
Air Force News Service


3/26/2013 - FORT MEADE, Md. (AFNS) -- When Neil Armstrong made history with man's first footsteps on the moon, Susan Helms needed a little nudging from her mom to get excited. And get excited she did. She realized that there would never be another first step on the moon, and even as a young 11-year-old, knew the feat was something special.

Little did she know that a little more than two decades later, then Maj. Helms would be the first woman military astronaut to fly in space.

"I would read books on science, the planets, the universe and nature," Helms said. "I spent a lot of time with my nose in a book."

That interest in science would lead to graduation from the U.S. Air Force Academy with a bachelor's degree in aeronautical engineering in 1980, as a member of that first graduating class of women cadets.

Helms began her Air Force career as an F-15 and F-16 weapons separation engineer with the Air Force Armament Laboratory at Eglin Air Force Base, Fla. After going back to school to obtain a Master of Science degree in aeronautics and astronautics from Stanford University, she would head back to the Academy as an assistant professor of aeronautics.

In 1988, she would spend the year attending test pilot school at Edwards AFB, Calif., where she would graduate as a distinguished graduate and earn the R.L. Jones award for outstanding flight test engineer. Helms would then spend more than two years as a flight test engineer with the CF-18 at Cold Lake, Alberta, Canada.

She would then get the assignment that would catapult her into the history books.

In January of 1990, Helms was selected by NASA to become an astronaut, and after rigorous training at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, would officially become an astronaut in July of 1991.

Her first space shuttle flight was aboard the Endeavor in January of 1993, where she and her crew were responsible for deploying a $200 million tracking and data relay satellite. A Diffuse X-Ray Spectometer carried in the payload bay collected more than 80,000 seconds of X-ray data that would help answer questions about the origin of the Milky Way galaxy.

A year-and-a-half later Helms would serve aboard the Discovery as the flight engineer for orbiter operations, with the mission to validate the design and operations of the Lidar in Space Technology Experiment, or LITE. Helms and her team gathered data about the Earth's troposphere and stratosphere, and deployed and retrieved the SPARTAN-201, a free-flying satellite that investigated the physics of the solar corona and the testing of a new spacewalk maneuvering device.

Her third shuttle flight took her aboard the Columbia, where in late June and early July of 1996, Helms was the payload commander and flight engineer on the longest space shuttle mission at the time - a total of 16 days, 21 hours and 48 minutes. The mission included studies by 10 nations and five space agencies and was the first mission to combine a full microgravity studies, as well as a comprehensive life science investigation.

During middle to late May of 2000, Helms performed a mission on Atlantis dedicated to the delivery and repair of hardware for the International Space Station. She also had the responsibility of maintaining and repairing the onboard computer network, and served as a mission specialist for the rendezvous with the station.

During her final mission in March of 2001, Helms lived and worked aboard the International Space Station. She was part of a two American and one Russian team with the mission of conducting tests on the Canadian-built Space Station Remote Manipulator System, conducting maintenance, and medical and science experiments. On March 11, she set a world record space walk of 8 hours and 56 minutes. She would spend a total of 163 days aboard the space station.

After a 12-year NASA career that included 211 days in space, Helms returned to the Air Force in July 2002 to take a position as the chief of the air superiority division at Headquarters, U.S. Air Force Space Command.

In June of 2006, she was appointed a brigadier general and became commander of the 45th Space Wing and Director, Eastern Range, Patrick AFB, Fla. As the wing commander, she was responsible for the processing and launch of U.S. Government and commercial satellites from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla.

Today, Helms is a lieutenant general, assigned as the commander of the 14th Air Force and the Joint Functional Component Command for Space at Vandenberg AFB, Calif. She leads a command of more than 20,500 Airmen and civilians responsible for providing missile warning, space superiority, space situational awareness, satellite operations, space launch and range operations.



tabComments
3/27/2013 1:20:19 PM ET
Still inspiring today...she was one of my Aero Engineering instructors and her passion for Air and Space was clear even back then. Aim High
Lt Col Geoff Gibbs, Maxwell AFB AL
 
3/27/2013 11:12:21 AM ET
MSgtWhile you are correct that General-Major Tereshkova was the first female military person in space she was a cosmonaut not an astronaut. Subtle difference that the writer should have mentioned but the article is technically correct.
Space TSgt, Schriever AFB
 
3/27/2013 10:37:27 AM ET
Gen Helms awed us with space stories during a shuttle landing viewing. Her record-setting space walk is what will keep her in the history books though.
Lady Capt, Robins AFB GA
 
3/26/2013 10:14:36 PM ET
General-Major Valentina Tereshkova was a lieutenant in the Soviet Air Force when she completed 48 orbits in Vostok 6 in 1963. That was 30 years before Lt Gen Helms first flight.
Ret MSgt, St Paul MN
 
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