Renate Luise Brümmer (born 4 May 1955) is a Swiss-born German meteorological scientist and former astronaut.[1] Specialising in satellite meteorology, she was selected as an astronaut in 1987, retiring in 1993, having never been into space.

Renate Brümmer
Born
Renate Luise Brümmer

(1955-05-04) 4 May 1955 (age 69)
NationalityGerman
Occupation(s)Scientist, astronaut
Space career
SelectionGerman astronaut team (1987)
MissionsSTS-55
Retirement6 May 1993 (1993-05-06)
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Munich
University of Miami (PhD)
ThesisOn The Use Of Profiler Data In Limited-Area Numerical Weather Prediction (1986)
Academic work
DisciplineMeteorology
InstitutionsUniversity of Colorado Boulder, University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
Scientific career
FieldsMesoscale forecast modeling, Satellite meteorology

Early life and education

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Brümmer received the equivalent of a Master of Science degree in mathematics and physics from the University of Munich in 1981, and a Doctorate from the University of Miami in meteorology and physical oceanography in 1986.[1][2]

She had previously qualified as a schoolteacher and taught mathematics and physics at a secondary school. She also held a private pilot's license.[3]:238

Space career

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The German astronaut team in 1987; Brümmer is furthest right

The German Aerospace Center was due to select a group of German scientists to become astronauts for the Spacelab D2 missions in 1986, following the successful flights of Ulf Merbold in 1983 and 1985; this selection was postponed until 1987 after the Challenger disaster.[3]:237–238 To select astronauts, a competition was run in 1986, and 1400 people applied; 20% were women.[4]:279 Brümmer was one of the five people in the first selection to the German astronaut team on 3 August 1987, as a payload specialist.[3]:237 Two of the selection were women, Brümmer and Heike Walpot, Germany's first women astronauts;[3]:237[5] neither woman ever went to space.[6]

Brümmer completed basic training by 1990 with the rest of the German team, then undertook further mission-specific training across Europe and the United States. The crew for NASA mission STS-55 was selected in early 1992, with Brümmer and Gerhard Thiele being made reserves and trained for both flight and mission control; Walpot was named a crew interface coordinator and only trained for mission control.[5] As part of the Spacelab D2 group training in Cologne and planning to use the Space Shuttle in 1992, Brümmer was initially considered to fly on the Soviet Mir mission that had been scheduled for the same time, which instead went ahead as Soyuz TM-14 with mostly Russian astronauts and Germans selected after the first five.[7]:224–225

For STS-55, in 1993, she was a reserve astronaut and supported the flying astronauts from the Oberpfaffenhofen control centre during the mission; if she had flown, she would have been the first schoolteacher to orbit Earth.[3]:238 The German astronaut team was disbanded later in 1993.[3]:238

Later career

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Brümmer is a professional meteorologist; she had been a research associate at the University of Colorado Boulder at the time of her astronaut selection.[3]:237 After retiring as an astronaut, she returned to Boulder, Colorado, to become a researcher at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.[3]:238

She joined the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (CIRA) in 1995 at Colorado-Boulder.[2] Initially, she worked as part of the GLOBE Program and in running the FX-Net project to deliver forecasting interfaces over the Internet. In the 2010s, she began working as a coordinator for the Regional and Mesoscale Meteorology Branch, researching satellite applications.[2]

References

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  1. ^ a b "Astronaut Biography: Renate Brümmer". Spacefacts. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  2. ^ a b c "Brummer, Renate". Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Shayler, David; Moule, Ian (2005). Women in Space – Following Valentina. Berlin: Springer. ISBN 978-1-84628-078-8. OCLC 262677737.
  4. ^ Harvey, Brian (2003). Europe's Space Programme: To Ariane and Beyond. London: Springer. ISBN 1-85233-722-2. OCLC 51270809.
  5. ^ a b "25th anniversary of the D-2 mission". DLRARTICLE DLR Portal. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  6. ^ "DLR - German astronauts". MISSION DLR Portal. Retrieved 17 March 2020.
  7. ^ Hall, Rex; Shayler, David; Vis, Bert (2005). Russia's Cosmonauts: Inside the Yuri Gagarin Training Center. Chichester: Springer/Praxis. ISBN 978-0-387-73975-5. OCLC 262679841.
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