Antelope Valley Press

First Space Test Fundamenta­ls class graduates

- By 2ND LT. CHRISTINE SAUNDERS Air Force Test Center

EDWARDS AFB — The US Air Force Test Pilot School graduated the first-ever Space Test Fundamenta­ls class Tuesday at Edwards Air Force Base.

Fifteen enlisted, officer and civilian Airmen and Guardians represent the first class dedicated to testing within the newly contested domain of Space.

Gen. John W. “Jay” Raymond, the Space Force chief of space operations, was on hand to give the graduation address.

“You were handpicked from a pool of over 160 applicants, not only to attend this inaugural Space Test course, but also to help us build this course and define its future as the initial Space Test cadre,” Raymond said. “You were the ‘Beta testers’ of the course itself, simultaneo­usly studying hard and developing the future of our space test education and training program.”

The course enables the US to enhance its test and evaluation mission and multiply its ability to deliver combat-ready space forces.

“For more than 75 years, Test Pilot School has trained and educated the Air Force’s test leaders– bold pilots, weapons systems officers, engineers, and astronauts,”

Raymond said. “Today, we expand upon that legacy.”

Continuing the legacy of bold and innovative leaders is paramount, as this new generation will be ambassador­s and pioneers of streamline­d, integrated test — combining the classicall­y stove-piped experiment­ation, developmen­tal test, operationa­l test and tactics developmen­t to deliver space warfightin­g capabiliti­es to the field.

The initial cadre of graduates come from various space warfightin­g discipline­s to include operators, engineers, program managers — civilian and military Airmen and Guardians, ranging in rank from specialist 4 through lieutenant colonel.

“I’m very proud of these young Airmen and Guardians, carrying the pioneering spirit of the Test community into Space,” said Maj. Gen. Christophe­r Azzano, Air Force Test Center commander. “This graduation is the culminatio­n of years of collaborat­ion between the Air Force Test Center and the Space community.”

The three-month program leverages worldclass Test Pilot School expertise and is designed to provide hands-on training in flighttest fundamenta­ls, systems test, space science applicatio­n, advanced space system test and evaluation, and broad exposure to the foremost centers of space operations and testing.

Throughout the course, a variety of case studies, guest lectures, and site visits were utilized to learn from those currently operating in the space environmen­t and those who have paved the way, to include the experience­s of three astronauts, and the retelling of the F-15 satellite intercept test program by retirees Maj. Gen. Doug Pearson and Col. Jack Anthony.

“To the Air Force Test Center and the Test Pilot School, thank you. In a little over a year, your leadership and collaborat­ion turned the idea of a space test course into reality,” Raymond said. “I look forward to building a rich tradition of collaborat­ion between the Air and Space Test communitie­s.”

The initial Space Test Fundamenta­ls course took 18 months to develop and will evolve with student feedback.

The next class is scheduled to begin May 24.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF AIR FORCE/TECH. SGT. ROBERT CLOYS ?? Gen. John W. Raymond, United States Space Force Chief of Space Operations, speaks Tuesday at the first-ever Test Pilot School Space Test Fundamenta­ls Course graduation at Edwards Air Force Base.
PHOTO COURTESY OF AIR FORCE/TECH. SGT. ROBERT CLOYS Gen. John W. Raymond, United States Space Force Chief of Space Operations, speaks Tuesday at the first-ever Test Pilot School Space Test Fundamenta­ls Course graduation at Edwards Air Force Base.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States