Kjell Lindgren (born January 23, 1973, Taipei, Taiwan) is an American astronaut who has made two spaceflights to the International Space Station (ISS) and is part of the Artemis team of astronauts eligible to fly to the Moon in the mid-2020s.
Lindgren was born in Taiwan. His father was in the United States Air Force, and his mother was Taiwanese. They lived in Taiwan until Lindgren was two years old, when his father was transferred to the United Kingdom. During high school Lindgren moved to the United States.
Lindgren had long wanted to be an astronaut, so he decided to become a test pilot in the air force. He attended the United States Air Force Academy, where he was part of the Wings of Blue parachute team. He received a bachelor’s degree in biology in 1995. After graduating, he entered pilot training but was diagnosed with asthma and medically discharged.
Lindgren then decided to become a doctor. He earned a master’s in cardiovascular physiology from Colorado State University in 1996 and a doctorate of medicine from the University of Colorado in 2002. He specialized in emergency medicine and in 2005 was chief resident in that area at Hennepin County Medical Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His asthma had disappeared, thus reviving his dream of becoming an astronaut.
Lindgren joined NASA in 2007 as a flight surgeon at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. He was involved with training astronauts for ISS flights in Russia and Ukraine. In 2009 he was selected as an astronaut and began two years of training.
Lindgren was launched to the ISS on board Soyuz TMA-17M on July 22, 2015, for his first spaceflight. He made two space walks with American astronaut Scott Kelly, who was spending nearly a year on the ISS as part of a record-breaking flight. Lindgren performed many experiments on the station, including growing zinnias and lettuce, which the astronauts ate. He returned to Earth on December 11, after 141 days in space.
Lindgren tweeted about the space-grown lettuce: “Great harvest! Lettuce on cheeseburger last night. Tortilla, rehydrated beef patty, cheese spread. Thanks #science!”
In 2020 Lindgren was chosen for a group of 18 astronauts eligible to fly Artemis program missions, which are to return American astronauts to the Moon for the first time since 1972. On the Artemis III mission, scheduled for 2026, two astronauts are to land on the lunar surface. Those astronauts, whom NASA has said will be the first woman and the first person of color on the Moon, are to spend almost a week in the Moon’s south polar region.
Lindgren’s second spaceflight was as commander on the SpaceX Crew-4 mission, which launched from Cape Canaveral on April 27, 2022, to the ISS. Lindgren again worked on many experiments, including a study on how microgravity ages the immune system. After spending 170 days in space, he returned to Earth on October 14. During his two spaceflights, he has spent more than 312 days in orbit.