- William E. Thornton
Infobox Astronaut
name =William Edgar Thornton
type =NASA Astronaut
status =Retired
nationality =American
date_birth =April 14 ,1929
place_birth =Faison,North Carolina
occupation =Medical Doctor
selection =1967 NASA Group
time =13d 01h 16m
mission =STS-8 ,STS-51-B
insignia =|William Edgar Thornton (M.D.) (born
April 14 ,1929 ) is a formerNASA Astronaut . Thornton was born inFaison, North Carolina , and is married with two sons to the former Elizabeth Jennifer Fowler ofHertfordshire, England .Education
* Attended primary and secondary schools in
Faison, North Carolina
*1952 : Received a bachelor of science degree in physics from theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
*1963 : Received a doctorate in medicine from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.pecial honors
* Recipient of the Air Force Legion of Merit (
1956 )
* NASA Exceptional Service Medal (1972 )
* NASA Exceptional Scientific Achievement Medal (1974 )
* American Astronautical Society’s Melbourne W. Boynton Award for1975 (1977 )
* two NASA Space Flight Medals (1983 ,1985 )
* University of North Carolina Distinguished Alumni Award (1983)
* Aerospace Medical Association Randy Lovelace Award (1984 )
* AIAA Jeffries Medical Research Award (1985)
* Association of Military Surgeons of the United States Kern Award (1986 )
* NASA Exceptional Engineering Achievement Award (1988 ).Experience
Following graduation from the University of North Carolina and having completed Air Force
ROTC training, Thornton served as officer-in-charge of the Instrumentation Lab at the Flight Test Air Proving Ground. He later became a consultant to Air Proving Ground Command.As chief engineer of the electronics division of the
Del Mar Engineering Labs at Los Angeles from1956 to1959 , he also organized and directed its Avionics Division. He returned to the University of North Carolina Medical School in 1959, graduated in 1963, and completed internship training in1964 at the Wilford Hall USAF Hospital atLackland Air Force Base ,San Antonio, Texas .Dr. Thornton returned to active duty with the
United States Air Force and was then assigned to the USAF Aerospace Medical Division,Brooks Air Force Base , San Antonio, where he completed the Primary Flight Surgeon’s training in 1964. It was during his two-year tour of duty there that he became involved in space medicine research and subsequently applied and was selected for astronaut training. Dr. Thornton developed and designed the first mass measuring devices for space, which remain in use today.Dr. Thornton has logged over 2,500 hours pilot flying time in jet aircraft, is currently a Clinical Assistant Professor in the Department of Medicine,
University of Texas Medical Branch ,Galveston, Texas , and is an adjunct Professor at theUniversity of Houston-Clear Lake .NASA experience
Dr. Thornton was selected as a scientist-astronaut by NASA in August
1967 . He completed the required flight training atReese Air Force Base , Texas. Dr. Thornton was physician crew member on the highly successful Skylab Medical Experiments Altitude Test (SMEAT) -- a 56-day simulation of a Skylab mission enabling crewmen to collect medical experiments baseline data and evaluate equipment, operations, and procedures. Dr. Thornton was also the mission specialist onSMD III , a simulation of a Spacelab life sciences mission.Dr. Thornton was a member of the astronaut support crew for the
Skylab 2 , 3, and 4 missions, and principal investigator for Skylab experiments on mass measurement, anthropometric measurements,hemodynamics , and human fluid shifts and physical conditioning. He first documented the shift and loss of fluid changes in body posture size and shape, including increase in height and the rapid loss of muscle strength and mass in space flight.As a member of the Astronaut Office Operations Missions Development group, Dr. Thornton was responsible for developing crew procedures and techniques for deployable payloads, and for maintenance of crew conditions in flight. He developed advanced techniques for, and made studies in,
kinesiology andkinesimetry related to space operations.During
Space Shuttle operations he continued physiological investigations in thecardiovascular andmusculoskeletal andneurological areas. He developed the Shuttle treadmill for in-flight exercise and several other on-board devices. His work concentrated on the space adaptation syndrome, with relevant investigations onSTS-4 ,STS-5 ,STS-6 ,STS-7 , andSTS-8 .Dr. Thornton holds more than 35 issued patents that range from military weapons systems through the first real-time
EKG computer analysis. Space-related items include the first in-flight mass measurement devices, shock and vibration isolation systems, an improved waste collection system, an improved lower body negative pressure (LBNP) apparatus, and others.A veteran of two space flights, Dr. Thornton has logged over 313 hours in space. He served as a mission specialist on
STS-8 in 1983, andSTS-51B in 1985.Dr. Thornton continued his work in space medicine while awaiting his next flight opportunity. He worked on problems relative to extending mission durations in the
Space Shuttle , in theSpace station , and in space exploration, and has designed the necessary exercise and other hardware to support such missions. He continued analysis and publication of results from studies of neurological adaptation, and the study of neuromuscular inhibition following flight,osteoporosis in space and on Earth, and postflightorthostasis . He has completed designs for exercise and other countermeasure equipment for the Extended Duration Orbiter (EDO), and forSpace Station Freedom , including improved treadmills, rowing machines, isotonic exercise devices, and a bicycle. Much of this is currently scheduled for flight.Dr. Thornton retired from NASA effective
May 31 ,1994 .paceflight experience
STS-8 "Challenger" (August 30 toSeptember 5 ,1983 ). This was the third flight for the Challenger and the first mission with a night launch fromKennedy Space Center , Florida, and a night landing atEdwards Air Force Base , California. During the flight Thornton made almost continuous measurements and investigations of adaptation of the human body to weightlessness, especially of the nervous system and of the space adaptation syndrome. This was a continuation of his previous work in these areas. Much of the equipment used was designed and developed by Thornton. The mission was accomplished in 98 orbits of the Earth, traveling 2.2 million miles in 145 hours, 8 minutes, 4 seconds.STS-51B /Spacelab-3 "Challenger" (April 29 toMay 6 , 1985). The Spacelab-3 science mission was launched from Kennedy Space Center, Florida, and returned to land at Edwards Air Force Base, California. During the 7-day flight, Thornton was responsible for the first animal payload in manned flight and other medical investigations. The mission was accomplished in 110 orbits of the Earth, traveling 2.9 million miles in 169 hours and 39 minutes.External links
* [http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/thornton-w.html NASA Bio]
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