Tuesday April 23, ARISS contact with
school in Maine, USA. Downlink audible in Europe.
An International Space Station school
contact is scheduled with participants at
Bates College Museum of Art, Lewiston, Maine, USA. Astronaut will be
Christopher J. Cassidy, KF5KDR. Maine is
Cassidy’s home state. The event is to begin at approximately 14:38:47 UTC,
which is 16:38:47 CEST.
The contact will be a telebridge
operated by IK1SLD, located in North Italy. Interested parties in Europe are
invited to listen to dowlink signals on 145.800 MHz FM.
School presentation:
In an arrangement proposed by the Bates
College Museum of Art in conjunction with our 2012 exhibition Starstruck: The
Fine Art of Astrophotography, local 8th Grade students are preparing to talk
with astronauts on the International Space Station in April through the Amateur
Radio on the International Space Station program (ARISS). Please keep
up-to-date on contact details through bates.edu/museum/events/
Students from the Auburn and Lewiston
middle schools will take part in the live radio communication. Members of ARISS were excited by how our
project brought the world of art and creativity into a program aimed at
science, technology, engineering and math classrooms. To prepare for the contact, students visited
the exhibition as part of their space science unit, researched comets and
geomagnetic storms, modeled the solar system, explored citizen-science projects
like Galaxy Zoo, and, using NASA’s Astronomy Picture of the Day as a model, researched
Starstruck images and wrote paragraphs explaining their significance.
It is gratifying to see an art
exhibition ignite so much interest in such a wide variety of subjects, and
especially to see a reunification of art and science achieved through this
exhibition and the ARISS program.
Senators Angus King and Susan Collins
and Congressman Michael Michaud have been invited to attend the event.
Participants will ask as many of the
following multilingual questions as time allows:
1. Alex: What are the biggest struggles
of living on the Space Station?
2. Julia M: What would you like to see
NASA accomplish soon such as a manned mission to Mars to extensive zero-gravity
experiments?
3. Emily R: In your opinion, what are
the most beneficial or useful experiments in space?
4. Abshir A: Does all of the electricity
come from the solar panels or is there another natural resource that the ISS
uses?
5. Emily R: How will determining the
accuracy of the MRI help doctors here on Earth?
6. Thomas J: After all of your training,
what was your hardest task in space, and what’s your greatest achievement?
7. Brenna E: Have any of the algorithms
made by students to operate the spheres satellite on board the space station
been successful?
8. Megan G: Explain the training that
takes place underwater and its similarity with the feeling in space.
9. Destiny: Has there ever been a
surprise illness or emergency, what happened?
10. Kyla H: If I wanted to become an
astronaut when I grew up, what advice would you give me?
11. Megan M.: Can any diseases or
disabilities be caused by going to space?
12. Leona: Are there ISS experiments that deal with the
psychological stresses of being in space or away from loved ones for extended
periods?
13. Paige: What would be the challenges
to having a baby or doing surgery in space?
14. Kasey T: What does everything look
like outside of the space station? What do the planets, sun and stars look
like?
15. Faith R.: What animals are allowed
on the ISS?
16. Patric R.: When you launched into
space, how many “G”s did you experience on the way up? What does it feel like?
17. Dylan M.: How is working in limited
gravity interesting and challenging?
18. Antonio B: What is your biggest fear
in space?
19. Rachel: How do you keep the ISS
clean?
20. Angelina N: How exactly would you
describe the sensation of suddenly going weightless from passing through
Earth’s atmosphere?
21. Chase: What kinds of disagreements
happen on the ISS and how do you resolve them?
22. Noah: How difficult is it to sleep
in space?
ARISS is an international educational
outreach program partnering the participating space agencies, NASA, Russian
Space Agency, ESA, CNES, JAXA, and CSA, with the AMSAT and IARU organizations
from participating countries.
ARISS offers an opportunity for students
to experience the excitement of Amateur Radio by talking directly with
crewmembers onboard the International Space Station. Teachers, parents and
communities see, first hand, how Amateur Radio and crewmembers on ISS can
energize youngsters' interest in science, technology and learning.
73
Gaston Bertels, ON4WF
ARISS Chairman