:''This article is about the astronaut. For the basketball player, see
Gary Payton.''
Colonel 'Gary Eugene Payton', USAF, (born
20 June,
1948) is a former
American astronaut.
Education
Payton graduated from high school in
Rock Island,
Illinois, in 1966. He went on to attended
Bradley University, in
Peoria, Illinois. After one year at Bradley, he entered the
United States Air Force Academy, in
Colorado Springs, Colorado, graduating with a
Bachelor of Science degree in
astronautical engineering in 1971. He continued with his graduate education at
Purdue University, in
West Lafayette, Indiana, earning a
Master of Science degree in astronautical and
aeronautical engineering in 1972. He graduated from
pilot training at
Craig AFB, in
Alabama in 1973.
Career
Payton served as a Spacecraft Test Controller from 1976 to 1980, at
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, in
Florida. He was selected for the
USAF Manned Spaceflight Engineer Program in February 1980.
Payton flew on the
STS-51-C mission aboard the
Space Shuttle Discovery in January
1985 which launched from and returned to land at the
Kennedy Space Center, in
Florida. STS-51C was the first dedicated
Space Shuttle Department of Defense mission. At the conclusion of the mission, Payton had traveled over 1.2 million miles in 48 Earth
orbits, and logged more than 73 hours in
space.
Payton is now the
Deputy Under Secretary of the Air Force for Space Programs.
He has accumulated at least 1,080 hours in
T-37,
T-38 and
T-39 aircraft.
External links and references
★
NASA Biography
★
Spacefacts biography of Gary Payton