Chris Hadfield

Chris Hadfield, OOnt CD, (born August 29, 1959) is a Canadian retired astronaut. The first Canadian to walk in space,[1] he has flown on two space shuttle missions and also served as commander of the International Space Station. That made him the first Canadian to serve as commander of the International Space Station. He led Expedition 35 after its launch on 19 December 2012.[2] He was previously a a Royal Canadian Air Force fighter pilot.[3]


Chris Hadfield

Chris Hadfield 2011.jpg
Born29 August 1959 (aged 66)
StatusRetired
NationalityCanadian
OccupationTest pilot
Space career
CSA Astronaut
RankCommander, CSA & NASA
Colonel, RCAF fighter pilot (retired)
Time in space
166 days
Selection1992 CSA Group
Total EVAs
2
Total EVA time
14 hours 53 minutes and 38 seconds
MissionsSTS-74, STS-100, Soyuz TMA-07M, Expedition 34/35
Mission insignia
Sts-74-patch.png STS-100 patch.svg ISS Expedition 34 Patch.png ISS Expedition 35 Patch.svg

Forbes described Hadfield as "perhaps the most social media savvy astronaut ever to leave Earth" with an audience all over the internet including over 2 million Twitter followers,[4] over 600 thousand Facebook fans,[5] one of the top Reddit AmA threads of all time,[6] and a popular Tumblr blog.[7]

Hadfield wrote a memoir, An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth, and published it in 2013.[8] The book became a New York Times bestseller[9] and was the bestselling book in Canada on a Canadian subject.[10]

Chris Hadfield Media

References

Other websites