![]() The crew, including four who arrived on the space station Thursday, have been forced to set aside science research and other projects while they ride out the threat. The US Space Command said the station’s seven crew members were told to prepare in case they get hit by orbiting debris that is coming “uncomfortably” close over the next few days. Panicked NASA cancels spacewalks after ISS astronaut’s helmet ‘fills with water’Īstronauts and cosmonauts aboard the International Space Station were forced to duck into their capsules for shelter Monday as a shower of space junk threatened to pelt the orbiting craft. Russia to withdraw from International Space Station in 2024, build new baseĮlon Musk’s SpaceX to fly Russian cosmonaut to International Space Station: NASA Prior to this, Lucie was payload ops engineer at CNES where she worked as an Experimental Manager to help scientists to prepare and conduct a broad range of experiments in microgravity, be it aboard the International Space Station, Airbus A300 Zero-G, or Ground Analogs.Kamala Harris jokes she’ll ‘write letters’ to space station after call drops She participates in several Think Tanks and knowledge groups in the field of technological development in space and terrestrial medicine. Lucie also acts as Head of Healthcare applications at the Centre National d’Etudes Spatiales (CNES) to promote and foster innovation between the healthcare and space industrial sectors. MEDES achieves this through its work in three main sectors: support in space medicine and physiology for space exploration, clinical research, and lastly e-health and support for epidemiological monitoring. Since its creation in 1989, MEDES has been striving to maintain and help develop French competence in space medicine and physiology and to promote the application of space research in the field of health. This webinar is part of a series preparing the upcoming SG2021 event, and will allow event’s participants and other participants to start thinking about the different topics and challenges that will be tackled during the day.ĭr Lucie Campagnolo is project manager at MEDES, the Institute for Space Medicine and Physiology. The participants will then be able to ask their questions to the experts, followed by an interactive activity in teams on the theme of the Future of the International Space Station! Art and space, an old relation – by Annick Bureaud, Director of Leonardo/OLATS, Member of ITACCUS & Independent art critic, curator and event organiser in the domain of art and technosciences.The ISS as a lab for Life Science Research – by Lucie Campagnolo, Space and Life Sciences Expert at MEDES.The ISS and its environment, and space accessibility for businesses and industries – by Jason Aspiotis, Business Development Manager at Axiom Space.This webinar aims at introducing the key question that will be studied during the SG2021 event next month in workshop sessions: how to diversify the ISS activities to create opportunities for non-space sectors from 2025-2030? To find elements of answers for this wide question, the various domains that will be considered during the SG2021’s workshop are physical science and technology, life science and biology, space accessibility and space art and culture.įor this webinar, the participants will attend 3 speeches which are: But, due to their new ambitions, and with private businesses starting making their way in the station, things will change. Until now, and likely until the mid 2020s, space agencies and mostly NASA, were its contributors. The future of the ISS is pending on its investors. ![]() Last year, the 20th anniversary of the greatest international project of all time – the International Space Station (ISS) – was celebrated! Twenty years of ongoing human presence in space, of scientific research in a unique microgravity environment and twenty years of acquired experience to deal with future human space explorations… But after all of this, what is next?
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