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Friday 14 August 2009

Wednesday 12 August 2009

THE END... OR THE BEGINNING

For our students this is the end of the space school experience but they have been made very aware of the ongoing benefits of the programme and the contacts they have made in the space industry.
They have also made strong connections with each other and the graduation and departure were very emotional events for many.
Facebook is their preferred medium, only old people blog. And there is a huge buzz of activity as they "friend-up" each other and make plans for their next meeting.
You've seen most of these before: but it is a selection from the first day to the last and the captions may be helpful.
Thanks for reading!
John

Wednesday 5 August 2009

TUESDAY

After our morning lecture on space medicine we grabbed a boxed lunch and drove to Galveston. At the University of Texas Medical Branch we participated in a videoconference, students gave brief presentations on their projects and mentors introduced themselves.

ARISS LINK TO SPACE STATION

Watch our students speak live from UHCL to the crew of the International Space Station

Monday 3 August 2009

SUNDAY


Sunday was the Cultural and Food Fair, when all students bring a dish from their country and perform a talent item. Patrick delivered a haka to tumultuous applause, and India and John' s waiata were also well received, as was John's impromptu hongi workshop.













The New Zealand contribution to the dessert trolley: pavlova and pineapple lumps!

John's "colonial goose" mysteriously absent from photo...

SATURDAY


My kind host family took me to the San Jacinto monument, the tallest monument in the world. An elevator takes you nearly to the top and from there you have views of the Houston Sea Channel, the bayous and the massive oil refinery installations.







Also at San Jacinto is the USS Texas, a destroyer which served in both world wars. This panorama shot shows the stern of the Texas and the sea channel.

Although this was supposed to be a host family day we were given a surprise event: the return of the shuttle crew to Ellington Airbase. One of the crew of STS-127 had remained behind on the ISS and the first Japanese astronaut was brought back instead.
Here the crew file up on stage to a rousing bit of music (Alison tells me it's the Stars and Stripes March, and she would know).

The Japanese astronaut gets a Texas welcome!

From the airbase we proceeded to a football stadium and watched a game of football, getting home about 10pm.

FRIDAY

After a lecture by Juniper Jairala on her work testing EVA technologies, we spent some time in our teams doing project work. Then to Oriental Gourmet for an amazing and varied buffet meal.

During a Texas thunderstorm we rushed to the vans and headed off to Brazos Bend State Park







At Brazos Bend there is a visitor centre dedicated to public education, and about half the space is made up as a simulation mission control and spacecraft, where students can participate in a mission to the moon and on to Mars. The simulation is as realistic as possible and students get really involved!




After the simulation we went for a walk around the lake and saw big banana spiders, racoons, herons and an alligator. Really hot, but an amzing and beautiful place.






After a meal and an an astronomy lecture we were treated to a couple of hours of stargazing through the massive telescopes of the George Observatory situated on top of the visitors' centre.
A long day but absolutely brilliant!

Friday 31 July 2009

THURSDAY

Tour of Johnson Space Centre in the morning
Picked up by NASA staffers and buses in the carpark, then taken on a VIP tour of several JSC facilities: Click on any picture for the fullsize image
SPACE VEHICLE MOCKUP FACILITY
This is where full-scale models of vehicles used in space are constructed. Astronauts can then train and test procedures.
The Mars rover mockup is shown.





APOLLO-ERA MISSION CONTROL
This historic room is where the dramas, triumphs, and tragedies of the Apollo programme were controlled. Now abandoned, the room is deeply atmospheric and "more than a room". John Jurgenson, who worked for mission control from 1967 (he retires today) spoke about some of his experiences and insights including the first landing by Apollo 11 and the recovery of Apollo 13.



ISS AND SHUTTLE CONTROL ROOMS
Bright, clean and colourful, the new control rooms project a feeling of controlled excitement. We visited the shuttle control room during a live linkup with the crew of STS-127.
Huge screens in the rooms project real-time video of activity in the vehicles, telemetry and positioning data on a world map, and technical messages on the systems. The photo is of the ISS room.


NEUTRAL BUOYANCY LAB (BIG POOL)
Astronauts train for zero-gravity by using this pool. They have weights/floats attached to give them neutral buoyancy so they can practice some of the tasks they will have to perform during EVAs (extra-vehicular activities).




In the second photo you can see the astronaut as a white shape just under the surface. Each astronaut has four attending divers.







FOOD PREPARATION LAB
This is where the food for all space missions is prepared. Surprisingly domestic-looking, the facility is all about packaging, the food eaten by the astronauts is not that different from what we terrestrials eat every day. Although they avoid anything crumbly or too liquid.




It's all about packaging - an evolution from toothpaste tubes to spoon-bags and beyond - although the Russians still use tins!

Wednesday 29 July 2009

WEDNESDAY'S PHOTOS



John with Dr Lee Morins















Red Team begin planning their mission



Team badge, first slide and song completed!

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WEDNESDAY

First full day at UHCL.
First guest speaker was astronaut Dr Lee Morins in his blue astronaut overalls. HE gave us a talk on the space station assembly process and his role in it. He then moved on to talk about his interest in "rocks to rockets" which is about using the resources already on the moon for energy and construction. Millions of kilogrammes of existing materials such as metal oxides can be utilised rather than bringing everything from Earth at enormous expense, risk and time. Solar energy and microwaves can be used to effect the physical and chemical changes to produce building materials and conductors etc. Telepresence can be used to allow robots or machines to carry out tasks while being operated from Earth.
Then we finally got together as a team in a breakout room to start our project - Red team is working very well and I'm really impressed with our progress.
After lunch the leader of the JSC imagery group Patrick Chimes gave us a fascinating talk and dozens of historic and contenporary shots of spaceflight. This gave students a very valuable insigh into the evolution of the technology, society and culture of space exploration. Then back to breakout room for more project work and finally a briefing.
Dinner was at Tierra Luna Tex-Mex restaurant on Saturn Drive near JSC. The owner's husband is, of course, an astronaut (Jose Hernandez)!

TUESDAY

To UHCL for the first full day of the programme.
Sabiha gave the students a run-down of some of the stages they might experience, being so far from home in a different culture. We then went out into the atrium for some team-building with Peter Fontana, who has recently returned from training missionaries in China. This was fun and gave the students a chance to work together in their teams with their mentors for the first time. I picked up a couple of good team activities from Peter.
After lunch in the university cafe we went to the Houston Space Center. This is a display/activity/souvenir/foodhall sort of place, incredibly noisy and full of schoolkids on holiday. But it also had some useful displays and an IMAX theatre.


Quiet evening getting to know and appreciate host family.

Monday 27 July 2009

Monday Photos













(click for large version)
You can see this and other pictures from today's activities here
  • Lunch at Villa Capri restaurant on the shores of Clear Lake, with opening remarks by Rob Alexander, and notables from UHCL, JSC and an astronaut.
  • Tour of UHCL and team interviews
  • Soccer match at Gilruth Centre (students won!)

Thursday 23 July 2009

WHO ARE WE?


The kiwi students at USS this year are Patrick (NPBHS) and India (NPGHS) and I'm one of the mentors who guide the students through the school programme.

WHY US?
Patrick and India were chosen because of their academic ability, but also for their passion for space exploration and technology.
Me? I have been the "country contact" for a few years and because of the quality of the students we have sent over the last decade the USS board voted that NZ would provide the first visiting scholar.

You can read the Taranaki Daily News article about us here

What's This?

A daily blog so you can all keep up with our trip to United Space School in Houston 27 July - 8 August 2009