- Thomas Akers
Infobox Astronaut
name =Thomas Dale Akers
type =Astronaut
nationality =American
date_birth =May 20 ,1951
place_birth =St. Louis,Missouri
occupation =Test Pilot
rank =Colonel , USAF
selection =1987 NASA Group
time =33d 22h 44m
mission =STS-41 ,STS-49 ,STS-61 ,STS-79
insignia =|Thomas Dale Akers (born
May 20 ,1951 in St. Louis,Missouri , U.S.) is a formerastronaut in the United StatesSpace Shuttle program .He graduated from the University of Missouri–Rolla with B.S. and M.S. degrees in
Applied Mathematics in 1973 and 1975, respectively.In 1979, he entered the Air Force, and was selected for the astronaut program in 1987.
Akers is a veteran of four shuttle flights in which he spent over 800 hours in orbit, including more than 29 hours of
extra-vehicular activity (EVA) experience. In each of his flights, his role was as amission specialist , usually as a payload specialist.His first space flight was in 1990 on
STS-41 , the 11th flight of shuttle Discovery. He was instrumental in deploying theEuropean Space Agency satellite Ulysses, a solar-exploration craft, as well as tending several secondary payloads and experiments.His next mission was in 1992 on
STS-49 , the maiden flight of shuttle Endeavour. A primary goal of that mission was to capture and repair the non-functionalIntelsat VI-F3 satellite. The first two attempts failed; Akers joined the third attempt which was successful. This marks the first three-person EVA in human history and was also the longest EVA (8 hours, 29 minutes) ever conducted to that time. As of January, 2004, it is now the second longest EVA, and is still the only instance of a three-person EVA.On Akers' third mission in 1993 on
STS-61 , the 5th flight of Endeavour, he was one of four mission specialists who repaired and upgraded theHubble Space Telescope on its first servicing mission. Akers spent just under 13.5 hours outside the Endeavour in two EVAs.On May 18, 1994, Akers appeared on
Home Improvement as himself along with rest of the STS-61 crew.His last mission was in 1996 on
STS-79 , the 17th flight ofshuttle Atlantis. This was the fourthshuttle flight to rendezvous with the Russianspace station Mir and the first to exchange US astronauts with Mir, returningShannon Lucid to earth and leavingJohn Blaha .Akers retired from
NASA in 1997 and the Air Force in 1999 at the rank ofColonel , taking a position as instructor of Mathematics at the Missouri University of Science and Technology.Thomas Akers enjoys hunting, fishing, horseback riding, and restoring old automobiles.
Students rate his teaching highly. In 2008 Akers was rated as one of the top 50 highest rated professors on ratemyprofessors.com.
In his classes in Missouri University of Science and Technology, Akers explains complex concepts in simple straight forward terms. Some of Akers catch phrases that students hear in class include "dee da dee da dee da dee," "put it in grandma terms," "how would you explain this to your grandma," "put it in farmer's terms," "now, if we were sitting at home on a cold winters night...," "this is communist algebra," and "this is a head shaver." He is also quite fond of "alligator math."
External links
* [http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/akers.html Astronaut bio: T. Akers 6/00]
* [http://www.spacefacts.de/bios/astronauts/english/akers_thomas.htm Spacefacts biography of Thomas Akers]
* [http://www.spacefacts.de/mission/english/sts-41.htm Spaceflight mission report: STS-41]
* [http://www.spacefacts.de/mission/english/sts-49.htm Spaceflight mission report: STS-49]
* [http://www.spacefacts.de/mission/english/sts-61.htm Spaceflight mission report: STS-61]
* [http://www.spacefacts.de/mission/english/sts-79.htm Spaceflight mission report: STS-79]
* [http://www.crossandcrescent.com/2006/09/astronaut-to-math-teacher/ Article "Astronaut to Math Teacher"]
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