Encyclopedia
Astronautica

astronautix.com

topic index

 
 
The truth, the central stupendous truth, about developed countries today is that they can have -- in anything but the shortest run -- the kind and scale of resources they decide to have . . . It is no longer resources that limit decisions. It is the decision that makes the resources. This is the fundamental revolutionary change -- perhaps the most revolutionary mankind has ever known

   ---U Thant


Patchett
 

Bruce E Patchett British Payload Specialist Astronaut candidate. Born 1948. Died 12 September 1996.

Personal: Male. Born in Settle, Yorkshire, UK. Cause of Death: 'Year-long illness'.

Astronaut Career

Astronaut Group: Payload Specialist (Candidate). Entered space service: 15 April 1978. Left space service: 9 August 1978.

Patchett was selected as a payload specialist in 1978. Although he never flew, he later was an active participated in the CHASE experiment on the Spacelab 2 mission in 1985. He was head of the Solar Group at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory between 1985 and 1992 and was a member of the ESA Solar System Working Group in the mid-1980's. Bruce Patchett was one of the original proposers for the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), and was part of the ESA Phase A study team for SOHO. He was responsible for SOHO’s Coronal Diagnostic Spectrometer (CDS) and guided it safely from the design stage to a successful selection for SOHO in 1988. He was Principal Investigator for CDS until 1992 after which he moved into a leadership role in the commercial arm of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.

His interests spread far beyond solar physics. He worked for many years on supernovae and in detector development. Bruce Patchett died after a year-long illness in 1996 and was survived by his wife, Kate, and son Joe.

Exact birth date unknown.

 
Contact Mark Wade with any corrections, additions, or comments.
Conditions for use of drawings, pictures, or other materials from this site..
This web site is sponsored by SpaceBank.com
Last update 26 October 2005.
To contact astronauts or cosmonauts.

© Mark Wade, 2005 .