Lee
Morin, a University of New Hampshire graduate and manchester native, was
aboard the international space station in 2002. He currently works at
the Johnson space center, developing the cockpit of Nasa’s newest
spacecraft, which will travel to the moon by 2024.
Astronaut
Dr. Lee Morin
A Manchester native and university of New Hampshire graduate, Lee Morin has led a diversified career as a naval flight surgeon who volunteered to re-enter active duty during Operation Desert Storm as a medical practitioner at a private practice and as a NaSa astronaut.
In 2002, the retired U.S. Navy captain was launched to the International Space Station and performed two spacewalks totaling 14 hours.
He currently works at the Johnson Space center in Houston where is the supervisor of the crew Interface Rapid Prototyping lab, working on the cockpit of NaSa’s newest spacecraft, the Orion Multipurpose crew Vehicle, which is scheduled to take the next men and the first woman to the moon by 2024 as part of the artemis program.
Q. You’ve had a
career path that includes degrees in medicine, microbiology and
engineering, and then joining NaSa. What was your plan?
A.
When I was at UnH, I started off in engineering and I ended up deciding
to apply to medical school because I thought there would be lots of
problems to apply to medicine. That was really the path. I did surgical
training and I’m board-certified as an occupational medicine specialist,
but I always found engineering applications in medicine interesting,
and there are a lot of opportunities in that area for various
technologies applied to medical problems.
Q. How does one become an astronaut?
A.
The astronaut is a special recruitment program. Every two to five
years, an announcement comes out from nasa. In my case, the navy had a
selection board you applied to, and the navy would decide who they
wanted to forward to nasa.
Once
all of those applications are received, it’s a formal Hr process. There
is a screening board, and many astronauts serve on that board to take
the qualified and identify the highly qualified and then the most highly
qualified that are brought forth for interviews. One hundred and twenty
people or so are typically done 20 at a time, and those people are
brought forward for medical testing, physiological testing, interviews
and tours so the interviewees understand the nature of the job.
And
some months after those interviews, nasa will announce – and that’s
usually a national media event, and the individuals who are selected are
individually called. That’s a very fun phone call to take: ‘Would you
like to be an astronaut?’ and that’s usually a really easy question to
answer, too.
Q. tell me what it was like being launched into space.
A. You go up in this elevator that goes up to 195 feet, and then the
people up there help you get strapped in and position you and make sure
you’re all ready to go. you’re all strapped in, you’re sitting on your
back and looking at the controls you’re responsible for, and you’re
thinking about your training. and then those people go away, and now
you’re sitting on 5 million pounds of explosives and you’re ready to
take off, and you think, “What did I get myself into?” but it’s too late
for second-guessing.
They
light the engines for six seconds before they commit to a launch. The
whole space shuttle shifts a foot and a half, and then you hear that
distance rumbling of the main engines and then they light the big
rockets along the side —
you feel like you just got rear-ended by a semi and you feel that
vibration and you feel that pull of the acceleration on your face. It’s
like the fingers pulling the skin of your face down, and it gets hard to
breathe because of the force pulling you down. It feels like the bully
at the playground sitting on your chest.
And then there’s a bang and the solids come off, and then the space shuttle is a smooth ride from that point.
This
whole process takes about eight minutes, and then it stops and things
are very still, and you open the seatbelt straps and the straps kind of
float away. Jerry ross, my partner — this was his seventh launch and
that was a record — said, “Welcome to space rookie,” and floated off to
work on the controls. Once you relax, you can move with very little
motion, just a few fingertips on the wall and you can float off in any
direction. you don’t need to climb up the ladder, just two fingertips
and you float up the ladder. It takes a while to get used to that, but
once you’re in space for a week, the concept of walking seems unnatural.
Q. Why are we returning to the moon?
A. A sustained presence on the moon is really one of our key goals going
forward, to develop the technology to go to Mars over the next decade
plus. The other key thing with the moon is being able to use the
resources there. We know what’s on the moon based on the apollo landing
as well as radar scanning. We know about the water on the moon. We also
know about the minerals that make up the moon. The key step will be
taking those things and using them for rocket fuel and habitats, and
basically nurture and build up an industrial base so we don’t have to
bring up things from earth. They call that insight resources
utilization, and that’s really going to be the key to enable longterm
presence of humanity.
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