Mission Viejo native Michael LĂłpez-AlegrĂa to be inducted into the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame
Fifty-one years ago on July 20, 1969, a then 11-year-old Michael LĂłpez-AlegrĂa was playing on Laguna Beachâs shores with his family and friends. He remembers the adults calling the kids out of the water and everyone gathering around transistor radios that broadcast Apollo 11âs historic landing onto the surface of the moon.
âAnd once they said, âTranquility Base, the Eagle has landed,â all these adults who were kind of strangers to each other were hugging and, like, slapping each other on the back like they were relatives or friends,â LĂłpez-AlegrĂa, 62, said. âIt was really quite a moment.â
Later that day at his familyâs home in Mission Viejo, LĂłpez-AlegrĂa was entranced watching grainy black-and-white footage of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walking on the moon.
The events on that summer day were influential in inspiring LĂłpez-AlegrĂaâs 20-year career as an astronaut for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and 37-year career in aviation and space flight.
Now LĂłpez-AlegrĂa will join his childhood heroes as an inductee for one of the industryâs highest honors: the U.S. Astronaut Hall of Fame. Though it was announced earlier this year (the ceremony was originally scheduled for May 16), the 2020 ceremony has been postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. LĂłpez-AlegrĂa and two other retired astronauts â Pamela A. Melroy and Scott Kelly â will be inducted at a later date.
âThey exemplify bravery, dedication and passion, and their hard work has paved the way for what promises to be an unprecedented new decade of space exploration and interplanetary travel,â said Curt Brown, space shuttle astronaut and board chairman of the Astronaut Scholarship Foundation, which oversees the selection process.
A place in the Hall of Fame is a rare honor. LĂłpez-AlegrĂa will be one of only 102 people in a revered company of space greats that includes Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and John Glenn.
Not that heâd brag about it. LĂłpez-AlegrĂa is down-to-earth (pun intended) about his accomplishments.
âLetâs be clear: I think the people I looked up to as a kid and even later as a 20-something-year-old â they really accomplished a lot more in terms of being on the cutting edge,â he said. âI mean, people who walked on the moon or flew to the moon or were the first in space â thatâs a pretty elite group. Iâm honored to be a part of it, but Iâm not really in the same league as those guys.â
LĂłpez-AlegrĂa went on four spaceflights for NASA (three Space Shuttle missions, and one mission as the commander of the International Space Station), holds two NASA records for spacewalks (for the highest number of spacewalks â 10 â and duration of time spent â 67 hours and 40 minutes), and speaks four languages (English, Spanish, Russian and French).
When asked which career highlight heâs proudest of, LĂłpez-AlegrĂa points to his experience in spacewalks, or extravehicular activity (EVA).
âI didnât set out to specialize in that, but I ended up being in the right place at the right time, and it is sort of the most iconic of the activities that an astronaut does,â he said. âAnd so, having [those records] is special. I know that [they] will fall someday, and Iâd be happy to hand the baton to the next person.â
Born in Madrid and naturalized as a U.S. citizen, LĂłpez-AlegrĂa moved to the U.S. with his family at age 2 and to Mission Viejo at 8. He graduated from Mission Viejo High School in 1976, then from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis in 1980. Designated a naval aviator, LĂłpez-AlegrĂaâs childhood dream of becoming an astronaut was reinvigorated at age 25 after he read a magazine article about Navy test pilots segueing into astronauts.
He trained at the U.S. Naval Test Pilot school and earned a master of science in aeronautical engineering before joining NASA in 1992. Three years later, LĂłpez-AlegrĂa was launched into orbit for his first Space Shuttle mission â the first Spanish-born astronaut to do so.
Among his favorite aspects of space flights are the launch (âan incredible roller coaster, white knuckle thrill rideâ), the fun of floating in microgravity, and the consuming but rewarding hours spent on research.
His most tense moment on a spacewalk â and likely the most comical â involved the âleast importantâ work he ever had to do: He and his Russian crewmate were tasked with hitting a golf ball in space for a commercial.
LĂłpez-AlegrĂa nearly lost his grip on the ball when it was exposed to the vacuum of space,
âAnd then my next thing was to hold my partnerâs feet, like an anchor, while he took a swing, and the bad news is that he shanked it, and we didnât get much video of it at all,â he said with a laugh.
Initially skeptical of space tourism and commercial space flight, LĂłpez-AlegrĂa had a change of heart after Iranian American entrepreneur and engineer Anousheh Ansari joined the crew on his last mission in 2006.
Ansari was the fourth space tourist in history and the first self-funded woman to fly to the International Space Station. Her blog and subsequent book about the experience introduced space travel to people who may not have considered it before.
âLiterally a million people were reading her blog, and these are people who would otherwise not care two cents about what was going on in space and human space flight,â LĂłpez-AlegrĂa said. âThis sort of idea of sharing the experience clicked with me, and really ever since then Iâve become a pretty big proponent of this idea of democratization of access to space.â
Following his retirement from NASA in 2012, LĂłpez-AlegrĂa moved to Washington, D.C., and served as president of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation, an advocacy group for commercial spaceflight companies. He continues to work in D.C. as an independent consultant for the industry, serves on advisory boards and is a public speaker.
He is excited about the industryâs progress â that there has been âa little of a renaissance in human spaceflightâ in the past several years â and suspects that it will be accessible to laypeople sooner than we think.
With the return of Elon Muskâs SpaceX Crew Dragon Demo-2 mission on Sunday â the first private company to send astronauts to the International Space Station â that reality just got a little closer.
He hopes that whoever goes into space â whether itâs astronauts or tourists â will get to experience the Overview Effect, a phenomenon where space travelers return with a different perspective about life on Earth.
âWhen you come back, you definitely feel more connected to other people and to the planet. A little bit more tolerant maybe, a little bit more skeptical about conflict,â LĂłpez-AlegrĂa said. âIt just seems like we all ought to figure out a way to get along together, because weâre all crew members on the same spaceship â planet Earth â and thereâs only one of them. And I think the more people who experience it, the better off our planet.â
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