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Astronaut Scott Kelly Available For Interviews



HOUSTON -- After a five-month stay aboard the International Space
Station, astronaut Scott Kelly will be available for live satellite
interviews on Tuesday, March 22, from NASA's Johnson Space Center in
Houston.

Kelly will be available from 6 to 8 a.m. CDT. The interviews will air
live on NASA Television.

To arrange an interview, reporters should contact producer Derek
Sollosi at 281-792-7515 or derek.sollosi-1@nasa.gov by 2 p.m. Monday,
March 21. Video b-roll from Kelly's mission will air from 6:30 to 7
a.m. on March 22 on NASA TV.

Kelly and his crewmates, Russian cosmonauts Alexander Kaleri and Oleg
Skripochka, launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan on
Oct. 7 (Oct. 8 Baikonur time). During the mission, Kelly served as
commander of Expedition 26, the 26th crew to live and work aboard the
space station. The trio spent 159 days in space and landed in
Kazakhstan on March 16.

Aboard the station, the Expedition 25 and 26 crew members worked on
more than 150 microgravity experiments in human research; biology and
biotechnology; physical and materials sciences; technology
development; and Earth and space sciences.

Kelly is from Orange, N.J. He has degrees from the State University of
New York Maritime College and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
He served as a pilot on shuttle mission STS-103 in 1999 and a
commander on STS-118 in 2007.

The interviews air on NASA TV's Live Interview Media Outlet channel.
The channel is a digital satellite C-band downlink by uplink provider Americom.

It is on satellite AMC 3, transponder 9C, located at 87 degrees west,
downlink frequency 3865.5 MHz based on a standard C-band, horizontal
downlink polarity. FEC is 3/4, data rate is 6.0 Mbps, symbol rate is
4.3404 Msps, transmission DVB-S, 4:2:0.

For NASA TV streaming video, downlink and scheduling information, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

For Kelly's complete biography, visit:

http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/Bios/htmlbios/kellysj.html

For more information about the International Space Station, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

Source: NASA







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