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  1. Dezember 1975 in der Präfektur Tokio [1]) ist ein japanischer Astronaut . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Karriere in der Luftfahrt. 2 Raumfahrertätigkeit. 3 Privates. 4 Weblinks. 5 Einzelnachweise. Karriere in der Luftfahrt. Ōnishi absolvierte eine zweijährige Grundflugausbildung in Bakersfield, Kalifornien und ein Jahr später die Flugausbildung in Tokio.

    • 25. Februar 2009
    • Japan
    • 1 Raumflug
    • JAXA
  2. Takuya Onishi (大西 卓哉, Ōnishi Takuya, born 22 December 1975) is a Japanese astronaut who was selected for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency in 2009. He spent four months on board the International Space Station in 2016.

  3. ONISHI Takuya was born in Tokyo in 1975, and spent roughly 113 days in space as a Flight Engineer aboard the International Space Station (ISS) as part of Expeditions 48 and 49 in 2016. During his stay, he supported the capture of the Cygnus OA-5 spacecraft and Extravehicular activities by controlling robotics, performed maintenance on the ISS ...

  4. 12. Sept. 2019 · The astronaut from the Japan’s space agency JAXA spent nearly four months in orbit. Takuya became the first Japanese to capture the Cygnus spacecraft in space with the Station’s robotic arm, and is an ‘aquanaut’ following his participation in NASA’s underwater NEEMO expedition.

  5. 21. Sept. 2023 · Now an accomplished astronaut in his 40s, Takuya Onishi finds himself back in the classroom juggling with geology jargon, time scales and tools he has never used before. Takuya welcomes the new challenge. He is the first Japanese astronaut to join ESA’s geology course PANGAEA, now running its sixth edition.

  6. 9. Mai 2017 · Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi did a Q&A with Tohoku University's International PR team about being an astronaut and what life was like on the ISS. News - With his heart in space and his feet on the ground | Tohoku University Global Site

  7. 24. Okt. 2023 · Japanese astronaut Takuya Onishi uses the Handheld Universal Lunar Camera (HULC) in a lava tube in Lanzarote, Spain. The engineers behind the lunar camera worked with ESA to put the new camera through its paces during the PANGAEA training programme.