| European finalists selected in Space Lab student competition |
| OTHER / ACADEMIA / Wednesday, 18 January 2012 22:30 | ||||||||||||
ESA, NASA, JAXA and the Canadian Space Agency have joined Google, YouTube, Lenovo and Space Adventures in an international science competition that challenges students aged 14–16 and 17–18 to design an experiment that can be conducted in microgravity on the ISS. Since the start of Space Lab in October 2011, over 2000 proposals from 80 nations have been submitted via YouTube (YouTube.com/spacelab), giving the blue-ribbon panel of judges a difficult challenge. Today, from thousands of submissions worldwide, sixty finalists were announced (see link at top right). European countries contributed 21 finalists.
"Today, numerous fundamental and applied research experiments in life and physical sciences, Earth and space monitoring as well as technology and education are performed on our Columbus laboratory on the ISS, closely coupled to terrestrial research programmes and issues." These include renowned scientist Professor Stephen Hawking, NASA's Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations William Gerstenmaier, NASA's Associate Administrator of Education and former Astronaut Leland Melvin, ESA's Head of ISS Utilisation and Astronaut Support Martin Zell, ESA astronauts Frank De Winne, Samantha Cristoforetti and Timothy Peake, JAXA Astronaut Akihiko Hoshide, Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield and Cirque du Soleil founder Guy Laliberté.
The two global winners will see their experiments sent into orbit and performed on the Space Station in summer 2012 – live-streamed on YouTube from space. "This will include briefings on orbital science and a personally guided tour led by European astronauts." More from this author:
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| Last Updated on Wednesday, 18 January 2012 22:32 |