NASA Astronaut To Visit Campbellsville University

Posted by on Sep 10, 2010

Leland Melvin, a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) astronaut, will be a guest speaker at Campbellsville University during a three-day visit Sept. 26-28.

Melvin will speak at several events on campus including an address to students at FIRST CLASS at 10 a.m. Monday, Sept. 26 in Ransdell Chapel, 401 N. Hoskins Ave., Campbellsville, and an event Tuesday, Sept. 27 in the Banquet Hall of the Badgett Academic Support Center, 110 University Drive, Campbellsville, from noon to 1 p.m. Both are open to the public.

He will also address the President’s Club Sept. 27 as the keynote speaker, speak to the Board of Trustees, appear on John Chowning’s Dialogue on Public Issues TV program on WLCU and speak to the Fighting Tiger football team.

His addresses will concern his experiences at NASA from 1989 as a researcher through 2008 where he has experienced three in-space missions as flight engineer and astronaut including his mission to the International Space Station in November 2009.

Melvin was selected by NASA JSC in June 1998 and is the veteran of two space flights, the Atlantis in 2008 which was the 24th shuttle mission to visit the International Space Station, and the mission in November 2009 which was the 31st shuttle flight to the International Space Station during which astronaut, Nicole Stott, was brought home following her tour of duty aboard the Space Station.

Melvin, 46, has logged over 565 hours in space.

Melvin began working in the Fiber Optic Sensors group of the Nondestructive Evaluation Sciences Branch at NASA Langley Research Center in 1989 where he conducted research in the area of physical measurements for the development of advanced instrumentation for Nondestructive Evaluation (NDE).

In 1994, Melvin was selected to lead the Vehicle Health Monitoring (VHM) team for the cooperative Lockheed/NASA X-33 Reuseable Launch Vehicle (RLV) program. The team developed distributed fiber optic strain, temperature and hydrogen sensors for the reduction of vehicle operational costs and to monitor composite liquid oxygen tank and cryogenic insulation performance.

In 1996, Melvin co-designed and monitored construction of an optical NDE facility capable of producing in-line fiber optic Bragg grating strain sensors at rates in excess of 1,000 per hour. This facility will provide a means for performing advanced sensor and laser research for development of aerospace and civil health monitoring systems.