Invitation til paneldiskussion i Rundetaarn ud fra spørgsmålet "How do we return to the Moon?" den 5. oktober 2019

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    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20182/almdel/UFU/bilag/21/2081714.pdf

    ”How do we return to the Moon?”
    Panel discussion in the Library Hall of the Round Tower, October 5th
    2019
    Foto/Photo: NASA
    Uddannelses- og Forskningsudvalget 2018-19 (2. samling)
    UFU Alm.del - Bilag 21
    Offentligt
    ”How do we return to the Moon?”
    Panel discussion in the Library Hall of the Round Tower- arranged as part of
    Space Days 2019 and the exhibit “Around the Moon” celebrating the 50th
    anniversary of the first manned landing on the Moon. See full program on
    www.spacedays.dk
    Date: Saturday October 5th
    2019
    Time: 5 PM – 8 PM
    Place: The Round Tower, The Library Hall, Købmagergade 52A, 1150 Copenhagen K,
    Denmark
    Participants in the panel: John Horack (moderator) USA, Andreas Mogensen Denmark,
    Emily Law USA, Peter Batenburg Holland, Gitte Bailey Hass Denmark, Sebastian Aristotelis
    Denmark
    PROGRAM:
    5 PM: PART ONE - presentations
    6.00 PM: Break – 30 minutes
    6.30 PM: PART TWO – discussion and Q & A
    Networking after discussion up to 8 PM
    Tickets: www.rundetaarn.dk www.rumfart.dk
    Andreas Mogensen's participation is arranged in collaboration with the European Space Agency
    (ESA) and the Ministry of Higher Education and Science (UFM).
    Participants in the panel discussion “How do we return to the Moon”
    Participants
    John Horack (Moderator)
    Topic: Return to the Moon: Collaboration, Competition, or Commercialism
    Bio: John M. Horack, Ph.D., is the inaugural holder of the Neil Armstrong Chair in
    Aerospace Policy at The Ohio State University, with tenured, full-professor appointments in
    the College of Engineering’s Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering department and the
    John Glenn College of Public Affairs. A 30-year veteran of the spaceflight industry, Dr.
    Horack also currently serves as He also serves as the Senior Associate Dean of
    Engineering at Ohio State, and is a globally recognized leader in space-based research,
    flight hardware development, program management, and space policy.
    Abstract: National space agencies around the globe are discussing their plans for
    returning humans to the Moon, it is not at all certain that these actors alone will drive the
    agenda and modalities of human exploration. Furthermore, within this flurry of activity on
    the part of NASA, ESA, China, Russia and others, the landscape between collaboration and
    competition is dynamic, and commercial interests are also strong actors in the future. The
    first commercial Moon mission - the Beresheet Lander from SpaceIL - was driven from
    Israel, and while not fully successful, it demonstrated that market forces and non-
    governmental entities are poised to play a substantive role. Dr. Horack will build on the
    discussions from the other panel members to explore the dimensions of cooperation and
    competition, the potential relevance or obsolescence of the ISS partnership model, and
    the role that non-government actors may play in our return to the Moon.
    Andreas Mogensen
    Topic: ESAs European Space Exploration Envelope Program
    Bio: Andreas Mogensen is an astronaut with the European Space Agency. Andreas
    became the first Danish astronaut in space on 2 September 2015, when he launched on a
    ten day mission to the International Space Station. He is currently stationed at NASA's
    Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas, where he serves as ESA's liaison to the NASA
    astronaut corps. At NASA, Andreas serves as the deputy chief of the Assigned Crew
    Branch. Andreas is an aerospace engineer with a PhD from the University of Texas at
    Austin and a M.Eng. from Imperial College London. His past research has focused on
    guidance, navigation, and control of spacecraft during entry, descent, and landing on Mars
    and the moon.
    Abstract: The European Space Agency has an ambitious program of human and robotic
    exploration of the Moon and Mars, that will see humans returning to the Moon for the first
    time since 1972, and eventually traveling to Mars. The exploration program provides a
    modular and sustainable path, building on the scientific knowledge and technology gained
    from the International Space Station. ESAs European Service Module is an integral part of
    the Orion capsule that will soon ferry astronauts back to the Moon. ESA will also develop
    two of the modules for Gateway, a space station in lunar orbit and a transit point for
    astronauts landing on the moon as early as 2024.
    Emily Law
    Topic: “Where We’ve Been And Where We’re Going”
    Bio: Emily Law has over twenty years of experience in research, development and
    management of complex information systems. Since 1996, she has been working at
    NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory where she has provided leadership and management in
    the architecture, development, technology and operations of highly distributed ground
    data systems for planetary exploration and earth science. Emily currently serves as
    Deputy Program Manager and Development Manager to two separate directorates
    covering data systems in solar system research and earth science. She also leads
    operations for NASA’s Planetary Data System, and oversees the development and
    operations of science data infrastructures and portals in support of Earth and Planetary
    science including the Solar System Treks Project (SSTP). She has authored papers and
    made numerous presentations on data intensive systems at various national and
    international venues.
    Abstract: During the Apollo program in 1960s and 19070s, six of the nine missions sent
    by NASA landed astronauts safely on the surface, the only times humans have visited
    another world. July 20, this year, marked the 50th
    Anniversary of the first human landing.
    The Apollo lunar flights ended in 1972, but the Moon has remained of great interest to
    NASA, international space agencies and scientists around the world. It’s time for us to
    recommit ourselves to our future presence in space beginning with a return to the Moon
    with a clear vision. This talk will reflect on “Where We’ve been” and share “Where We’re
    going” with NASA moving forward to the Moon.
    Gitte Bailey Hass
    Topic: How do we inspire the next generation to choose STEM topics?
    Bio: Gitte Bailey Hass has 20 years of teaching experience in the STEM subjects. 10 of
    these years were in the European School system, the rest in the Danish public schools.
    She has been teaching physics, chemistry, biology, mathematics and ICT for kids in the
    age between 7-17. During the years Gitte been a part of the political work to improve the
    level of science teaching. She was a board member of the NTS center, the National Center
    for Science, Technic and Health education, she is the chairman of DFKF, the Danish
    association for physics and chemistry teachers and in 2019 she was a part of the
    ministerial group responsible for the rewriting of the national syllabus for physics and
    chemistry."
    Abstract: How do we return to the Moon? We will never gain success with our dream of
    space exploring, if the next generation does not share the goals. How do we open the
    STEM subjects for our students in schools? What do we teachers need to catch their
    interest, so they choose to spend years of hard studies and low income, and we get
    enough of talented, well educated people to continue the quest for scientific knowledge of
    the universe and other vital and basal questions about being a human being.
    Peter Batenburg:
    Topic: Lessons learned from Apollo for future moon and Mars missions
    Bio: Peter Batenburg is a space system engineer and project manager with over 9 years
    of experience in different sectors of the space industry. He has worked for the ISS
    operations as an Operations Support Engineer and Payload and Mission integration
    manager for the IRISS mission. Besides the professional career Peter is active in the
    International Astronautical Federation (IAF), Netherlands Space Society (NVR) as board
    member and activity committee coordinator and fellow initiator of the national Apollo 11
    celebration platform www.50jaarmaanlanding.nl. Spaceflight, and in particular the Space
    Race and Apollo era, have fascinated Peter since the age of 4. As a result Peter has
    studied the history of spaceflight and Apollo in detail and the passion for space was a
    major driver for him to pursue a career in space.
    Abstract: On July 20th, the world celebrated the 50th
    anniversary of Neil Armstrong first
    step on the Moon not only the US. What made this event so unique is that it united the
    world while ironically it started with a cold war. Within less than 10 years the US managed
    to do what seemed impossible. What made this unique accomplishment possible and why
    we have not returned to the Moon or have not reached Mars yet? In other words; what
    are the lessons learned from Apollo and the Space Race and what does this mean for the
    next exploration mission to the Moon and Mars?
    Sebastian Aristotelis
    Topic: How to thrive in space
    Bio: Sebastian is a space architect and the co-founder of SAGA Space Architects, a newly
    formed architecture studio which focuses on how humans can thrive in space and not just
    survive. SAGA was founded last year after Sebastian and his Co-founder Karl-Johan
    Sørensen graduated from the International Space University. SAGA has won several
    awards for their work, most recently their Circadian Lunar Home. SAGA is currently
    working on a lunar habitat together with DTU Space which they are testing on an analog
    mission to the icecap of Greenland in April 2020.
    Abstract: With a background in architecture Sebastian will talk about how we go from
    surviving in outer space to thriving in outer space. Living in outer space has its own very
    extreme challenges. Together with his partner, Karl-Johan, Sebastian and their team are
    building a Moon habitat, which the two will test in northern Greenland next year.
    Sebastian and Karl-Johan will live in the habitat for 3 months in isolation. Sebastian will
    talk about the challenges and solutions of such a mission. He will explain why they do it
    and what they hope to learn.
    

    Invitation til paneldiskussion i Rundetaarn ud fra spørgsmålet "How do we return to the Moon?" den 5. oktober 2019

    https://www.ft.dk/samling/20182/almdel/UFU/bilag/21/2081710.pdf

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    30. september 2019
    Invitation til paneldiskussion i Rundetaarn ud fra spørgs-
    målet "How do we return to the Moon?" den 5. oktober 2019
    Den 5. oktober afholdes paneldiskussion i Rundetaarn ud fra spørgsmå-
    let "How do we return to the Moon?" med deltagelse af bl.a. den danske
    astronaut Andreas Mogensen, Emlily Law fra NASA, USA samt fra USA Neil
    Armstrong Chair og professor ved The Ohio State University, John Horack.
    Der er billetter til salg via Rundetaarns hjemmeside:
    https://www.rundetaarn.dk/event/how-do-we-return-to-the-moon-2/
    Se også hele programmet for SpaceDays 2019 her: www.spacedays.dk
    Venlig hilsen
    Lykke
    Lykke Pedersen
    Formand
    Dansk Selskab for Rumfartsforskning
    Mobil: +45 23 96 18 04
    Mail: lykke@rumfart.dk
    web: www.rumfart.dk/
    Med venlig hilsen
    Dan Westfall,
    udvalgsassistent
    Uddannelses- og Forskningsudvalget 2018-19 (2. samling)
    UFU Alm.del - Bilag 21
    Offentligt