Spaceflight Now: STS-101 Mission Report

Mary Ellen Weber, Ph.D.
OFFICIAL NASA BIOGRAPHY
Posted: April 20, 2000

PERSONAL DATA: Dr. Weber was born August 24, 1962 in Cleveland, Ohio; Bedford Heights, Ohio is her hometown. She is married to Dr. Jerome Elkind, who is with Texas Instruments, Inc. and originally from Bayonne, New Jersey. She is an avid skydiver, and also enjoys scuba diving and flying. Her mother, Joan Weber, currently resides in Mentor, Ohio; her father, Andrew Weber, Jr., is deceased.

EDUCATION: Graduated from Bedford High School in 1980; received a Bachelor of Science degree in chemical engineering from Purdue University in 1984; and received a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from the University of California at Berkeley in 1988.

EXPERIENCE: During her undergraduate studies at Purdue, Dr. Weber was an engineering intern at Ohio Edison, Delco Electronics, and 3M. Following this, in her doctoral research at Berkeley, she explored the physics of gas-phase reactions involving silicon. She then joined Texas Instruments to research new techniques in microchip manufacturing. TI assigned her to SEMATECH, a semiconductor consortium, and subsequently to Applied Materials and Technology, to bring forth a revolutionary silicon reactor. She has received one patent and published eight papers in scientific journals. Dr. Weber has logged over 3,100 skydives since 1983. She received a silver medal in the U.S. National Skydiving Championships in the 20-person freefall formation event, in 1997, 1995 and 1991; and she was in the world's largest freefall formation, with 297 people, in 1996. She is also an instrument-rated pilot.

NASA EXPERIENCE: Dr. Weber is currently in training for her second space flight on STS-101, which will be the third Shuttle assembly mission for the International Space Station. The seven member crew is slated to launch in early 2000 aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis for an 11-day mission, which will include rendezvous with the Space Station, robotic arm operations, and spacewalks.

In administrative assignments, Dr. Weber most recently has been working with a venture capital firm to identify promising areas of space research and related companies for investment. In addition, she was the Legislative Affairs liaison at NASA Headquarters in Washington D.C., interfacing with Congress and traveling with the NASA Administrator. Prior to this appointment, she was Chairman of the procurement board for the Biotechnology Program contractor.

Also, she served on a team designated to assess and revamp the Space Station research facilities. Dr. Weber's principal technical assignments within the Astronaut Office have included Shuttle launch preparations at the Kennedy Space Center, payload and science development, and development of standards and methods for crew science training. She was selected by NASA in the fourteenth group of astronauts in 1992.

On her first mission, STS-70, Dr. Weber launched aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery on July 13, 1995. The five-member crew delivered a NASA communications satellite, the sixth Tracking and Data Relay Satellite, which is now in operation 22 thousand miles above the equator. Dr. Weber's primary roles were in check out and release of the satellite, in operation of biotechnology experiments, as contingency spacewalk crew, and as medical officer. During this nine-day mission, Discovery completed 142 orbits of the Earth and traveled 3.7 million miles.

Mary Ellen Weber

Video vault
STS-101 mission specialist Mary Ellen Weber talks about the mission in a preflight interview with NASA public affairs.
  PLAY (1.2MB, 8min 26sec QuickTime file)
Download QuickTime 4 software to view this file.

NewsAlert
Sign up for our NewsAlert service and have the latest news in astronomy and space e-mailed directly to your desktop (free of charge).

Your e-mail address:

 


Latest news
See our Mission Status Center for the very latest news on the flight.


CREW DATABASE | STS-101 INDEX | MISSION STATUS CENTER