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From CERN to the International Space Station and back

In December I flew on the Space Shuttle Discovery to ISS, the International Space Station. The main objectives were to continue building ISS, deliver consumables, spare parts and experiments and for the exchange of one crew member on ISS. During the 8-day stay at ISS, I participated in three space-w...

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Autor principal: Fuglesang, C
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2007
Materias:
XX
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1044876
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author Fuglesang, C
author_facet Fuglesang, C
author_sort Fuglesang, C
collection CERN
description In December I flew on the Space Shuttle Discovery to ISS, the International Space Station. The main objectives were to continue building ISS, deliver consumables, spare parts and experiments and for the exchange of one crew member on ISS. During the 8-day stay at ISS, I participated in three space-walks, but also got the opportunity to perform one experiment, ALTEA, related to radiation in space and light flashes seen by many people in space. I will give a quick personal history, from when I was a Fellow at Cern in 1990 and learned that I could apply to become an ESA astronaut, to when I finally boarded a space craft to launch on Dec. 9th 2006. A 17 minute video will tell the story about the flight itself. The second half of the talk will be about research related to radiation in space that I have been involved in since joining ESA in 1992. In particular, about light flashes that were first reported on Apollo-11 in 1969, and the SilEye detectors flown on Mir and ISS to investigate fluxes of charged particles inside the space stations and correlations with light flashes. Some results from the DESIRE project, which built a Geant4-based simulation program of ISS and the European Columbus module, will be presented at the end.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2007
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spelling cern-10448762022-11-02T22:20:26Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1044876engFuglesang, CFrom CERN to the International Space Station and backXXIn December I flew on the Space Shuttle Discovery to ISS, the International Space Station. The main objectives were to continue building ISS, deliver consumables, spare parts and experiments and for the exchange of one crew member on ISS. During the 8-day stay at ISS, I participated in three space-walks, but also got the opportunity to perform one experiment, ALTEA, related to radiation in space and light flashes seen by many people in space. I will give a quick personal history, from when I was a Fellow at Cern in 1990 and learned that I could apply to become an ESA astronaut, to when I finally boarded a space craft to launch on Dec. 9th 2006. A 17 minute video will tell the story about the flight itself. The second half of the talk will be about research related to radiation in space that I have been involved in since joining ESA in 1992. In particular, about light flashes that were first reported on Apollo-11 in 1969, and the SilEye detectors flown on Mir and ISS to investigate fluxes of charged particles inside the space stations and correlations with light flashes. Some results from the DESIRE project, which built a Geant4-based simulation program of ISS and the European Columbus module, will be presented at the end.oai:cds.cern.ch:10448762007-06-14
spellingShingle XX
Fuglesang, C
From CERN to the International Space Station and back
title From CERN to the International Space Station and back
title_full From CERN to the International Space Station and back
title_fullStr From CERN to the International Space Station and back
title_full_unstemmed From CERN to the International Space Station and back
title_short From CERN to the International Space Station and back
title_sort from cern to the international space station and back
topic XX
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1044876
work_keys_str_mv AT fuglesangc fromcerntotheinternationalspacestationandback