- Dennis Tito
-
Dennis Anthony Tito Space Adventures Tourist Nationality American Born August 8, 1940
Queens, New YorkOther occupation Entrepreneur Time in space 7d 22h 04m Missions ISS EP-1 (Soyuz TM-32 / Soyuz TM-31) Mission insignia Dennis Anthony Tito (born August 8, 1940, in Queens, New York) is an Italian American engineer and multimillionaire, most widely known as the first space tourist to fund his own trip into space. In mid-2001, he spent nearly eight days in orbit as a crew member of ISS EP-1, a visiting mission to the International Space Station. This mission was launched by the spacecraft Soyuz TM-32, and was landed by Soyuz TM-31.
Contents
Career
Tito has a Bachelor of Science in Astronautics and Aeronautics from New York University, 1962 and a Master of Science in Engineering Science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute satellite campus in Hartford, Connecticut.[1] He is a member of Psi Upsilon and received an honorary doctorate of engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute on 18 May, 2002 and is a former scientist of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory. In 1972, he founded Wilshire Associates, a leading provider of investment management, consulting and technology services in Santa Monica, California. Tito serves an international clientele representing assets of $12.5 trillion.[2] Wilshire relies on the field of quantitative analytics, which uses mathematical tools to analyze market risks - a methodology Tito is credited with helping to develop by applying the same techniques he used to determine a spacecraft's path at JPL.[3] Despite a career change from aerospace engineering to investment management, Tito remained interested in space exploration.
Tito was appointed to the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power Board of Commissioners in the 1990s and led the board to support the landmark 1994 state ruling protecting Mono Lake from excessive water diversions by the city.[4]
Spaceflight
See also: ISS EP-1In a project first arranged by MirCorp, Tito was accepted by the Russian Federal Space Agency as a candidate for a commercial spaceflight. Tito met criticism from NASA before the launch, primarily from Daniel Goldin, at that time the Administrator of NASA, who considered it inappropriate for a tourist to take a ride into space.[5][6] When Tito arrived at the Johnson Space Center for additional training on the American portion of the ISS, Robert D. Cabana, NASA manager, sent Tito and his two fellow cosmonauts home, stating "...We will not be able to begin training, because we are not willing to train with Dennis Tito."[7]
Later, through an arrangement with space tourism company Space Adventures, Ltd., Tito joined the Soyuz TM-32 mission on April 28, 2001, spending 7 days, 22 hours, 4 minutes in space and orbiting Earth 128 times.[8] Tito performed several scientific experiments in orbit that he said would be useful for his company and business. Tito paid a reported $20 million for his trip.[9]
Since returning from space, he has testified at the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation, Subcommittee on Science, Technology, and Space and the House Committee on Science, Subcommittee on Space & Aeronautics Joint Hearing on "Commercial Human Spaceflight" on July 24, 2003.[10]
See also
- Wilshire Associates
- List of space travelers by name
References
- ^ Dennis Tito to Speak at Rensselaer Nov. 14
- ^ LAWRENCE E. DAVANZO APPOINTED PRESIDENT OF WILSHIRE ASSOCIATES
- ^ DENNIS A. TITO TO RECEIVE PRESTIGIOUS AMERICANISM AWARD FROM BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA
- ^ Defender of the Trust Award
- ^ Goldin, Koptev at Odds on Tito Flight
- ^ NASA Chief Remains Miffed Over Tito Launch: 'Space is Not About Egos'
- ^ http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/01/18/RVGH546K931.DTL The forgotten frontier
- ^ First Space Tourist Dennis Tito to Make Business Visit to Russia
- ^ Tito the spaceman BBC web site (accessed Feb. 2006)
- ^ Congressional Testimony "Commercial Human Spaceflight" by Dennis Tito, Wilshire Associates
Further reading
- Klerkx, Greg. Lost in Space, The Fall of NASA. Random House: New York. 2004. ISBN 0-375-42150-5
External links
- Tito the spaceman BBC web site (accessed Feb. 2006)
- Spacefacts biography of Dennis Tito
Categories:- American money managers
- Space tourists
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute alumni
- Amateur radio people
- American people of Italian descent
- 1940 births
- Living people
- New York University alumni
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.