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Nationality |
American |
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Status |
Active |
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Born |
September 19, 1965 Euclid, Ohio |
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Other occupation |
Test pilot |
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Rank |
Commander, USN |
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Space time |
194d 18h 02m |
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Selection |
1998 NASA Group |
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Missions |
STS-116,
Expedition 14, Expedition 15,
STS-117 |
Sunita Williams(born September 19, 1965) is a United
States Naval officer and a NASA astronaut. She was
assigned to the International Space Station as a member
of Expedition 14 and then joined Expedition 15. Williams
is the second woman of Indian heritage to have been
selected by NASA for a space mission after Kalpana
Chawla and the second astronaut of Slovenian heritage
after Ronald M. Sega. She holds three records for female
space travelers: longest spaceflight (195 days), number
of space walks (four), and total time spent on
spacewalks (29 hours and 17 minutes).
Personal
Williams is married to Michael J. Williams, a Federal
Police Officer in Oregon. The two have been married for
over 16 years, and both flew helicopters in the early
days of their career. Although they both have no
children, they have a pet Jack Russell Terrier named
Gorby. Her recreational interests include running,
swimming, biking, triathlons, windsurfing, snowboarding
and bow hunting. She is an avid Boston Red Sox fan. Her
parents are Dr. Deepak Pandya and Bonnie Pandya, who
reside in Falmouth, Massachusetts. Deepak Pandya is a
famous neuroanatomist. Williams' roots on her father's
side go back to Gujarat in India and she has been to
India to visit her father's family. She is of Slovenian
descent from her mother's side.
Education
Williams was born in in Euclid, Ohio, and attended
Needham High School in Needham, Massachusetts,
graduating in 1983. She went on to receive a Bachelor of
Science degree in Physical science from the U.S. Naval
Academy in 1987, and a Master of Science degree in
Engineering Management from Florida Institute of
Technology in 1995.
Military career
Williams received her commission as an ensign in the US
Navy from the US Naval Academy in May of 1987. She was
designated a Naval Aviator in 1989, and graduated from
the Naval Test Pilot School in 1993.
NASA career

Astronaut Sunita L. Williams, Expedition 14 flight
engineer, participates in the mission's third planned
session of extravehicular activity (EVA).
Selected by in June 1998, Williams began her training in
August 1998. Her Astronaut Candidate training included
orientation briefings and tours, numerous scientific and
technical briefings, intensive instruction in Shuttle
and International Space Station systems, physiological
training and ground school to prepare for flight
training, as well as learning water and wilderness
survival techniques. Following a period of training and
evaluation, Williams worked in Moscow with the Russian
Space Agency on the Russian contribution to the ISS, and
with the first expedition crew sent to the ISS.
Following the return of Expedition 1, Williams worked
within the Robotics branch on the ISS Robotic Arm and
the related Special Purpose Dexterous Manipulator. She
was a crewmember on the NEEMO 2 mission, living
underwater in the Aquarius habitat for nine days in May
2002.
Like many astronauts, Williams is a licensed amateur
radio operator having passed the technician class
license exam in 2001 and was issued the call sign KD5PLB
by the Federal Communications Commission on August 13,
2001. She used one of the two amateur radio stations
aboard the ISS when she talked with school children.
Spaceflight experience
STS-116
Williams was launched to the International Space Station
with STS-116, aboard the shuttle Discovery, on
December 10, 2006 to join the Expedition 14 crew. In
April 2007, the Russian members of the crew rotated,
changing to Expedition 15.
Among the personal items Williams took with her to the
International Space Station (ISS) are a copy of the
Bhagavad Gita, a small figurine of Ganesha and some
samosas.
Expeditions 14 and 15

Williams became the first person to run the Boston
Marathon from the space station on April 16, 2007.
After launching aboard Discovery, Williams
arranged to donate her pony tail to Locks of Love. The
haircut by fellow astronaut Joan Higginbotham occurred
aboard the International Space Station and the ponytail
was brought back to earth with the STS-116 crew.
In early March 2007 she received a tube of wasabi in a
Progress spacecraft resupply mission in response to her
request for more spicy food. Opening the tube, which was
packaged at one atmospheric pressure, the gel-like paste
was forced out in the lower-pressure of the ISS. In the
free-fall environment, the spicy geyser was difficult to
contain.
Williams performed her first extra-vehicular activity on
the eighth day of the STS-116 mission. On January 31,
February 4, and February 9, 2007, she completed three
spacewalks from the ISS with Michael Lopez-Alegria.
During one of these walks a camera became untethered,
probably due to failure of the attaching device, and
floated off to space, before Williams could react.
On April 16, 2007, she ran the first marathon by an
astronaut in orbit. Williams finished the Boston
Marathon in four hours and 24 minutes . The other crew
members reportedly cheered her on and gave her oranges
during the race. Williams' sister, Dina Pandya, and
fellow astronaut Karen L. Nyberg ran the marathon on
Earth, and Williams received updates on their progress
from Mission Control.
On the third spacewalk, Williams was in outside the
station for 6 hours 40 minutes to complete three space
walks in nine days. She has logged 29 hours and 17
minutes in four space walks, eclipsing the record held
by Kathryn C. Thornton for most spacewalk time by a
woman. On December 18, 2007, during the fourth spacewalk
of Expedition 16, Peggy Whitson surpassed Williams, with
a cumulative EVA time of 32 hours, 36 minutes.
Following the decision on April 26, 2007 to bring
Williams back to earth on the STS-117 mission aboard
Atlantis, she did not break the U.S. single
spaceflight record that was recently broken by former
crewmember Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria. However she
did break the record for longest single spaceflight by a
woman.
STS-117
Williams served as a mission specialist with STS-117,
and returned to Earth on June 22, 2007 at the end of the
STS-117 mission. Space shuttle Atlantis touched
down at the Edwards Air Force Base in California at 3:49
a.m. EDT, returning Williams home after a record 195-day
stay in space.
Mission managers had to divert Atlantis to Edwards in
the Mojave Desert as poor weather at the Kennedy Space
Centre in Cape Canaveral forced mission managers to skip
three landing attempts there over the last 24 hours.
“Welcome back, congratulations on a great mission,” NASA
mission control told Williams and the six other members
of the crew soon after the shuttle landed.
After the landing, 41-year-old Sunita was chosen as
"Person of the Week" by the ABC Television Network. In
December, the network noted, she had her long hair cut
so she could donate her locks to help those who lost
their hair while fighting an illness.
2007 visit to India
In September of 2007, Sunita Williams visited India. She
went to the Sabarmati Ashram, the ashram set up by
Mahatma Gandhi in 1915, and her ancestral village
Jhulasan in Gujarat. She was awarded the Sardar
Vallabhbhai Patel Vishwa Pratibha Award by the World
Gujarati Society, the first Non Resident Indian to be
presented the award. She also visited her cousin's home
on her nephew's birthday. On October 4, 2007, Williams
spoke at the American Embassy School, and then met
Indian President Pratibha Patil at Rashtrapati Bhavan.
|

Megha Bungalow, Ahmedabad |

Sunita-Dharam |

Nehru Memorial, Delhi |

Commander Williams with Prime minister Manmohan
Singh |
Organizations
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Society of Experimental Test Pilots
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Society of Flight Test
Engineers
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American Helicopter
Association
Awards and honors
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Navy Commendation Medals (twice)
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Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal
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Humanitarian Service Medal and various other service
awards
References
1.
NASA (2007). Sunita L.
Williams (Commander, USN) National Aeronautics and Space
Administration. Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
2. Tariq Malik (2007). Orbital
Champ: ISS Astronaut Sets New U.S. Spacewalk Record.
Space.com. Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
3. QRZ.com (2007). Sunita L
Williams. QRZ.com. Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
4. Radio Amateurs of Canada
(2007). Amateur Radio on the International Space Station
(ARISS). Radio Amateurs of Canada. Retrieved on December
19, 2007.
5. SiliconIndia (2006). With
Ganesh, the Gita and samosas, Sunita Williams heads for
the stars. SiliconIndia. Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
6. CollectSpace.com
(2006-12-20). Astronaut cuts her hair in space for
charity. Collect space.com.
7. Schneider, Mike (2007-03-02).
Space station suffers wasabi spill.
MSNBC.
8. Astronaut's Camera is Lost In
Space. Adoama.com (2006-12-22). Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
9. Eldora Valentine
(2007-04-06). Race From Space Coincides with Race on
Earth. NASA.
10. Zee News Limited (2007-04-17). Sunita Williams
Runs Marathon in Space. zeenews.com.
11. Jimmy Golen for The Associated Press (2007).
Astronaut to run Boston Marathon — in space. MSNBC.
Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
12. NASA (2007). NASA Astronaut to Run Boston
Marathon in Space. NASA. Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
13. CollectSpace (2007). Astronauts make 100th
station spacewalk . CollectSpace. Retrieved on December
18, 2007.
14. NASA (2007). Spacewalkers Find No Solar Wing
Smoking Gun. NASA. Retrieved on December 18, 2007.
15.mateur Radio News (2007-02-05). Ham-astronauts
setting records in space. Amateur Radio News. Retrieved
on 2007-06-08.
16. Mike Schneider for The Associated Press (2007).
Astronaut stuck in space — for now. MSNBC. Retrieved on
December 19, 2007.
17.William
Harwood for CBS News (2007). Atlantis glides to
California landing. Spaceflight Now. Retrieved on
December 19, 2007.
18.American Embassy School (2007-10-05). Astronaut
Sunita Williams Visits AES. American Embassy School.
Retrieved on 2007-10-07.
19.
Jenny May (2006-12-06).
Woman takes leap to moon with part of Euclid.
news-herald.com.
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