Scott D. Altman
- Additional Crew
Altman became an ensign in August 1981, and completed advanced jet
training, and his Navy wings of gold, in February 1983. He was
designated an F-14A Tomcat pilot, and his first assignment was with
Fighter Squadron 51, stationed at Naval Air Station Miramar, in San
Diego, CA. Altman completed two deployments to the Western Pacific and
Indian Ocean. (It was during his time at Miramar that _Top Gun
(1986)_qv was filmed, with Altman appearing as an F-14 pilot in a few
scenes.) In August 1987, he was selected for Test Pilot School and was
the Distinguished Graduate in June 1990. After graduation, he spent the
next two years as a test pilot working on various F-14 projects. His
next assignment was with Fighter Squadron 31, which was the first
squadron to field the new F-14D. His squadron participated in Operation
SOUTHERN WATCH over Iraq, and during the deployment he was notified of
his selection for the astronaut program. Altman reported to the Johnson
Space Center in March 1995. He was the pilot of Space Shuttle Columbia
on STS-90, which was aloft for 16 days (Apr 17-May 3, 1998), performing
life science microgravity experiments on the brain and nervous system
in Spacelab. He also flew as pilot of Space Shuttle Atlantis on STS-106
(Sept 8-20, 2000), which was the last construction flight to the
"unmanned" International Space Station before its first permanent crew
arrived. Altman flew as the commander of STS-109 aboard Space Shuttle
Columbia, which was the fourth maintenance flight to the Hubble Space
Telescope, (Mar 1-12, 2002).