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    • 1,400 hours

      • Over the course of his nearly 1,400 hours orbiting Earth — including almost 60 hours performing spacewalks — Ross helped save and deploy one of NASA's four "great observatories," worked at two space stations, and served the U.S. Department of Defense on a classified shuttle mission that he still cannot talk to this day.
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  2. A veteran of 7 space flights, Ross has over 1,393 hours in space, including 57 hours and 55 minutes on 9 EVAs. [1] (see below) In addition to his record number of launches, among his many personal milestones, Ross held the U.S. record for spacewalks (9) until that was surpassed by the current record holder, ISS Expedition 14 commander Michael ...

  3. Feb 6, 2013 · Over the course of his nearly 1,400 hours orbiting Earth — including almost 60 hours performing spacewalks — Ross helped save and deploy one of NASA's four "great observatories," worked at two...

  4. Ten Longest Total EVA Durations: Anatoliy Solovyov - 78.79 hours Michael López-Alegría - 67.67 hours Stephen Bowen - 65.95 hours Andrew Feustel - 61.80 hours Robert Behnken - 61.17 hours Peggy Whitson - 60.35 hours Fyodor Yurchikhin - 59.48 hours Robert Kimbrough - 59.47 hours Jerry Ross - 58.63 hours John Grunsfeld - 58.50 hours.

  5. A veteran of seven spaceflights, Jerry Ross spent more than 1,393 hours in space, including 58 hours, 18 minutes on nine spacewalks. When he retired from NASA in 2012, Ross was the only person to have been launched into space seven times.

    • First people in space. Gagarin was the first person to fly in space, and the first American followed only a few weeks later. Alan Shepard blasted off on Freedom 7 on May 5, 1961.
    • Oldest person in space. U.S. Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, was 77 when he flew on space shuttle Discovery's STS-95 mission in October 1998. The mission marked Glenn's second spaceflight; he had become the first American to orbit the Earth back in February 1962.
    • Youngest person in space. Cosmonaut Gherman Titov was one month shy of his 26th birthday when he launched into orbit aboard the Soviet spacecraft Vostok 2 in August 1961.
    • Most consecutive days in space. Russian cosmonaut Valery Polyakov spent nearly 438 consecutive days aboard the Mir space station, from January 1994 to March 1995.
  6. Apr 30, 2024 · Jerry Ross, American astronaut, the first person to be launched into space seven times. Selected to be an astronaut in 1980, he subsequently logged more than 58 days in space, including more than 58 hours over nine space walks. Learn more about Ross’s life and career.

  7. A veteran of seven space flights, Ross has more than 1,393 hours in space, including 58 hours and 18 minutes of EVA on nine spacewalks. He was the first human to be launched into space seven times. These seven flights comprise a world record that Ross now shares with one other NASA astronaut.

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