Curtis Brown



Portrait of Curtis Brown
Courtesy of NASA

Curtis Brown is an American astronaut who was born on March 11, 1956 in North Carolina. Before he became an astronaut, Brown was a pilot for the Air Force. He has flown over 3700 hours in jets.

Brown became an astronaut in 1987. He has made three spaceflights spending over 693 hours in space.

In 1992, Brown flew aboard Spacelab-J. This was a cooperative mission with the U.S. and Japan. In 1994, Brown studied planet Earth on STS-66.

In 1996, Brown was part of mission STS-77. Brown's next scheduled mission is aboard STS-85 in July 1997. This mission will study the Earth's atmosphere.


Curtis Brown



Portrait of Curtis Brown
Courtesy of NASA

Curtis Brown is an American astronaut who was born on March 11, 1956 in North Carolina. Before he became an astronaut, Brown was a pilot for the Air Force. He has flown over 3700 hours in jet aircraft.

Brown became an astronaut in 1987. He has made three spaceflights spending over 693 hours in space.

In 1992, Brown flew aboard Spacelab-J. This was a cooperative mission with the U.S. and Japan. In 1994, Brown flew aboard shuttle Atlantis on a mission studying planet Earth.

In 1996, Brown was part of mission STS-77, which set a record number of rendezvous sequences with four different satellites. Brown's next scheduled mission is aboard STS-85 in July 1997. This mission will study the Earth's atmosphere.


Curtis Brown



Portrait of Curtis Brown
Courtesy of NASA

Curtis Brown is an American astronaut who was born on March 11, 1956 in North Carolina. Before he became an astronaut, Brown was a pilot for the Air Force. He has flown over 3700 hours in jet aircraft.

Brown became an astronaut in 1987. He has made three spaceflights spending over 693 hours in space.

In 1992, Brown flew aboard Spacelab-J. This was a cooperative mission with the U.S. and Japan where several life science and material processing experiments were made. In 1994, Brown flew aboard shuttle Atlantis on a mission studying planet Earth.

In 1996, Brown was part of mission STS-77, which set a record number of rendezvous sequences with four different satellites. Brown's next scheduled mission is aboard STS-85 in July 1997. This mission will study the Earth's atmosphere.



Last modified prior to September, 2000 by the Windows Team

The source of this material is Windows to the Universe, at http://www.windows.ucar.edu/ at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). © The Regents of the University of Michigan. Windows to the Universe® is a registered trademark of UCAR. All Rights Reserved. Site policies and disclaimer