Astronaut PortraitsTognini Michel (France)

Michel TOGNINI portrait

Credits: ESA - J-L. Atteleyn

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Portrait of ESA astronaut Michel Tognini, from France. Personal data Born 30 September 1949, in Vincennes, France. Four children. Enjoys parachuting and parafoil, tennis, wind-surfing, water-skiing, snow-skiing, cross-country running, wave-surfing, discus launch gliders and microcomputers. Education Graduated from Lycée de Cachan, Paris. He received an advanced mathematics degree in 1970 from EPA Grenoble (military school). He enrolled at Ecole de l'air (French Air Force Academy), Salon de Provence, France, graduating with an engineering degree in 1973. Tognini attended the Empire Test Pilots School, Boscombe Down, United Kingdom in 1982 and the Institut des Hautes Etudes de Défense Nationale (IHEDN) in 1993-1994. He is Général de brigade aérienne (French Air Force). He gained qualifications as Fighter Pilot (all levels), Test Pilot, and Professional Pilot, he received Military Technical Diploma (BTEM) and the Cosmonaut diploma from the Soviet Union. Organisations Member of the Association of Space Explorers (ASE). Special honours Michel Tognini is Commander of "l'Ordre de la Légion d'Honneur", "Chevalier de l'Ordre National de Mérite", he received the French Aeronautics Medal, and the Soviet and Russian "Order of Friendship". Experience Following graduation in 1973 from the Ecole de l'Air, and qualifying as a fighter pilot in 1974, Tognini was posted to a fighter squadron stationed at Cambrai, where he served as flight leader in 1976, and flight commander in 1979. In 1982 he was admitted to the Empire Test Pilot School in Boscombe Down, United Kingdom, and received his test pilot diploma. He was awarded his military studies diploma in 1983. Tognini was then posted to the Cazaux Flight Test Center, France, and qualified as chief test pilot. In September 1985, Tognini was selected as astronaut by the French Space Ageny CNES. In August 1986, he was assigned as the back-up for the Soyuz TM-7 mission. Although Tognini remained a French Air Force officer, he was placed on detachment to CNES for his space flight activities from September 1986 onwards. In November 1986 he reported to the Yuri A.Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, Star City, near Moscow, for alternate astronaut training, including EVA, for the Soviet-French "Aragatz" mission. During 1989-1990 he supported the HERMES program in Toulouse, France. In 1991 he returned to Star City, Russia, to start prime crew training for the 3rd French-Russian "Antares" mission, which took place from 27 July to 10 August 1992. During this stay, he also gained piloting experience of BURAN simulators. After his mission, he returned to France and attended a training cycle of the French Institute for High Studies of National Defense from 1993-1994. In 1995, he took up Astronaut Candidate Training at the NASA Johnson Space Center in Houston/USA. He was initially assigned to the Operations Planning Branch of the Astronaut Office working technical issues on the International Space Station. About 150 papers, presentations and speeches about Space. Tognini has 4300 flight hours on 80 types of aircraft. In November 1999, Michel Tognini joined the European Astronaut Corps whose homebase is the European Astronaut Center (EAC) located in Cologne, Germany. His duty station however remained at NASA Johnson Space Center (JSC), where he performed technical duties in the International Space Station (ISS) Robotics Branch supporting the Mobile Base System (MBS) and the European Robotic Arm. He was also assigned to training support for the Shuttle and ISS robotics as well as for the ISS ExCan training of ISS crews (part of the Expedition Corps Working Group). In 2001 he worked as an ISS Capcom, and joined the ISS branch for Russian hardware and training/payload, Soyouz, Russian segment as well as for European COF training. Spaceflight experience Tognini participated in the "Antares" mission from 27 July-10 August 1992. This was his first flight to MIR, where he spent 14 days carrying out a program of joint Soviet-French experiments. His second flight was on STS-93 which took place from 22-27 July 1999. During this mission his primary task was to assist in the deployment of the Chandra X-Ray Observatory, and to conduct a spacewalk if needed. The Chandra X-Ray Observatory is designed to conduct comprehensive studies of the universe, and the telescope will enable scientists to study exotic phenomena such as exploding stars, quasars, and black holes. Current assignment Since 1 May 2003, Tognini is Head of the Astronaut Division at the European Astronaut Centre (EAC), Cologne, Germany.

Event Date
0000-00-00
Release Date
2003-08-26
Programme
European Astronaut Corps
Directorate
N/A
Location
EAC
Reference
04112
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