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Second Time’s the Charm
for New Hampshire School Space Contact
 Maple Avenue Elementary School in
Goffstown, New Hampshire. The April 13 ARISS contact was the very
first for a school in the Granite State. |
 Expedition 10 Commander Leroy
Chiao, KE5BRW, at the controls of the Phase 2 NA1SS station--a
specially modified Kenwood TM-D700E. The Phase 2 station is in the
crew’s quarters. [NASA Photo] |
 Fourth graders at Maple Avenue School line up April 5 for their first attempt to speak with the ISS via ham radio. Unfortunately, technical problems scrubbed the contact.
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 With smiling faces and questions in hand, youngsters are ready for their second, and successful, QSO with NA1SS. [Photos Courtesy of Jim Heedles, WW1Y]
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 Chiao, left, and crewmate Salizhan
Sharipov. The Expedition 10 crew returns to Earth on April 24. |
NEWINGTON, CT, Apr 20,
2005--Youngsters at Maple
Avenue Elementary School in Goffstown, New Hampshire,
had to wait an extra week, but on April 13, they were able to talk
directly via Amateur Radio with Leroy Chiao, KE5BRW, at the controls
of NA1SS on the International Space Station. Technical problems
cropped up on the originally scheduled date of April 5. The Amateur
Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) program was able to
reschedule the contact for April 13. Chiao told one youngster that
while there’s no weather per se in space, the ISS can view
Earth’s weather. The external environment of space does come
into play, however, in developing suits for spacewalks, he said.
“We really don’t run
into any kind of environmental weather or anything like that,”
Chiao explained. “Of course, outside in space it’s a
vacuum and it’s very cold or very hot depending on whether
you’re in the sun or in the shade. And so those are factors
that we consider when we design the spacesuits.”
During the approximately 10-minute
direct VHF contact, the 20 Maple Avenue kids ran smoothly through a
list of 20 questions, and Chiao was almost through answering the last
when the ISS got out of range of ground station W1SSC, the call sign
of Spaceflight Systems Corporation Amateur Radio Club in Nashua. Jim
Heedles, WW1Y, served as the Earth station control operator for the
contact.
Students taking part in the ARISS
contact were in Georgia Paris' fourth grade class, who spoke with
NA1SS using Amateur Radio equipment set up at the school specifically
for the contact with NA1SS.
Responding to another question,
Chiao elaborated on experiments that have been under way during his
Expedition 10 duty tour. Chiao said the space station’s goal is
to be a worldwide laboratory.
“We’ve done some
interesting experiments on board,” Chiao said. “We’ve
done one experiment in particular--something called ‘Telemed’--and
we use an ultrasound machine to image each other’s internal
organs and bones and teeth and things like that, taking directions
from a doctor on the ground.”
Chiao has explained in past ARISS
school contacts that the Telemed experiment is aimed in part at
coming up with ways to monitor the health of space travelers and
diagnose problems that might arise during long-term space ventures.
CLICK HERE
to listen to the April 13 ARISS QSO between NA1SS and youngsters at
Maple Avenue School in Goffstown, New Hampshire: [9:32] |
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The two-man crew, which includes
Russian cosmonaut Salizhan Sharipov, also has been growing some pea
pods, Chiao said.
The Maple Avenue Elementary QSO
marked the first Amateur Radio school group contact with a New
Hampshire school. An audience of 200 students, teachers, parents and
local dignitaries was on hand for the event, which was covered by
three newspapers and a TV documentary team. Audio from the event was
Webcast to sites in the US, the UK, Australia and Europe. Heedles
expressed his thanks to all who were involved in helping to make
“lifelong memories” for the fourth graders.
ARISS
is an educational outreach with US participation by ARRL, AMSAT and
NASA.
Page last modified: 03:48 PM, 22 Apr 2005 ET
Page author: awextra@arrl.org
Copyright © 2005, American Radio Relay League, Inc. All Rights Reserved.