ARISS News Release                                                                                                    No.23-05   Dave Jordan, AA4KN

ARISS PR

[email protected]

 

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

 

ARISS Contact is Scheduled with Students at

Colegio Diocesano Santa María Nuestra Señora, Écija, Spain

 

February 6, 2023—Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) has received schedule confirmation for an ARISS radio contact between an astronaut aboard the International Space Station (ISS) and students at the Santa María Nuestra Señora Diocesan School located in Écija, Spain.  ARISS conducts 60-80 of these special amateur radio contacts each year between students around the globe and crew members with ham radio licenses aboard the ISS.

 

Founded in 1935, Santa María Nuestra Señora Diocesan School is located in the city of Écija (40.000 inhabitants), in the province of Seville (SPAIN) and offers pre-school, primary and secondary education with a student body ages 3 to 16 years. The school provides educational innovation in, STEAM, PBL (Project-based learning), programming and robotics. During the three years leading up to this ARISS contact, students learned about space exploration through hands-on activities that included constructing models of planets in our solar system, radio communications with members of the URE Seville (Union of Spanish Radio Amateurs) and completed projects from the European Space Education Resource Office-Spain (ESERO). These activities also showed students what it is like to live and work in the ISS, and included visits to the science and technology park to discover how this helps us in our daily live.

 

This will be a telebridge contact via Amateur Radio allowing students to ask their questions of Astronaut Josh Cassada, amateur radio call sign KI5CRH. The downlink frequency for this contact is 145.800 MHZ and may be heard by listeners that are within the ISS-footprint that also encompasses the telebridge station.

 

The ARISS amateur radio ground station (telebridge station) for this contact is in Casale Monferrato, Italy. The amateur radio volunteer team at the station will use the callsign IK1SLD, to establish and maintain the ISS connection.

 

The ARISS radio contact is scheduled for February 8, 2023 at 11:13:59 am CET (Spain) (10:13:59UTC, 5:13 am EST, 4:13 am CST, 3:13 am MST, 2:13 am PST).

 

The public is invited to watch the live stream at:  http://www.ariotti.com/.  They are also streaming at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nYFP7qzUtk




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As time allows, students will ask these questions:

1. Is it cold in space?

2. How do astronauts sleep in space?

3. How can data be transmitted from space to Earth in real time?

4. What do you spend your time on? Are you always working on experiments?

5. What happens if you get injured, hurt or sick in the space?  Are there doctors on board?

6. How do astronauts eat and drink without gravity?

7. How do astronauts take a shower and go to the wc?

8. How can you breathe at the international station if there is no atmosphere/oxygen in space?

9. What is your main mission on the International Space Station?

10. How do you protect from orbital debris, or “space junk”?

11. What do astronauts like most about living in space?

12. Do you feel anything special as you go past the atmosphere and you stop feeling the Earth’s gravity?

13. How do you want or expect your mission to affect society?

14. What is the maximum time to stay on a space station?

15. Do your legs get numb being weightless?

16. Can plants and trees be grown on the space station?

17. How many astronauts can be on the space station?

18. Are unexplained UFO phenomena studied from the ISS?

19. What do you like most about being in space?

20. What kind of training is required to work on the ISS?

 

About ARISS:

 

Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) is a cooperative venture of international amateur radio societies and the space agencies that support the International Space Station (ISS). In the United States, sponsors are the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation (AMSAT), the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), the ISS National Lab-Space Station Explorers, Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) and NASA’s Space Communications and Navigation program (SCaN). The primary goal of ARISS is to promote exploration of science, technology, engineering, the arts, and mathematics topics. ARISS does this by organizing scheduled contacts via amateur radio between crew members aboard the ISS and students. Before and during these radio contacts, students, educators, parents, and communities take part in hands-on learning activities tied to space, space technologies, and amateur radio. For more information, see http://www.ariss.org

 

Media Contact:

Dave Jordan, AA4KN

ARISS PR

                                                                              

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