All,
 
This is my personal reflection on the last few days of the  ISS Symposium 2012, 
organised by ESA and DLR in Berlin. Official highlights are on their own 
website, twitter, youtube etc.
 
It's impossible to single out any particular speaker, so I'd like to give only 
an account of some things that resonated with my own amateur experience.
 
I was very pleased to see in an early presentation by Julie Robinson the images 
of both "ends" of an ARISS contact, and equally it was heartening to see in the 
NASA "Assembly complete edition of the Reference Guide to the ISS" on page 95, 
Communications, a diagram in which we see  "Ham radio transmits directly to the 
ground". The theme of engagement with young people was a constant throughout 
the Sympsoium with many references to them being inspired by 
astronaut/cosmonaut contacts, and I felt that ARISS was recognised as an 
important programme in this, hence my invitation described on my label , 
amongst the space professionals, as "Radio amateur -G0SFJ"..
 
Roscosmos/ TsNiiMash also referred to the Shadow experiment which relies on 
sending a beacon or "Mayak" signal from the ISS and received on Earth by us 
hams - and as a participant I talked with TsNiiMash delegates about that - and 
illustrated their presentations with Chiblis-M and with the MAI SSTV 
experiment. And the 3D journey in an adjoining salon visited the antennae on 
the Columbus module, both in simulation and in a real 3D picture!
 
Over dinner I discussed my personal view that some of us as hams would like to 
see more contacts of opportunity with the crew as time allowed, and I also 
described our work in receiving and passing on cubesat data. There was a view 
expressed that cubesats' reliance on COTS radio equipment did not always teach 
much about radio, and student Cubesat projects did not always lead to the next 
level of bigger and more complex space equipment. I was interested in this 
common problem between space science and ham radio, of getting young people 
involved, in this age of throwaway mobile phones and laptops. I was a little 
surprised that some German delegates I spoke to did not know of the work of the 
ISEI in Leipzig and the Kosmonautenzentrum in Chemnitz, who both stimulate 
young people into space exploration in their own ways, and I think the people 
who do this good work should enjoy a higher recognition.
 
Many presentations demonstrated the utility of space-generated data to Earth 
based problems, and a good example came from the reinterpretation of data taken 
on salt consumption by Sigmund Jähn on an Intercosmos flight in 1978. It was 
both interesting and disturbing to see that bone tissue had not regrown to 
preflight levels in many long duration astronauts and cosmonauts. Visual 
problems were also becoming obvious.
 
The debate extended beyond the current use of the ISS into the future of space 
exploration, Waleed Abdalati giving an inspirational speech about the future. 
Essentially our sphere of action extends only to the asteroid belt. >From the 
floor I asked the symposium a question of medical ethics, whether the Mars crew 
should be a younger or an older crew. As I recall, Chiaki Mukai immediately 
picked up on "Because of the radiation!" and the panel agreed with her and with 
psychologist Peter Suedfeld, who said that life taught many experiences in 
problem solving, that an older crew - by which I think we meant over about 55 - 
would be the ones who should go. Oleg Orlov from IBMP in Moscow concurred. 
Later, when Charles Bolden spoke about the US commitment to a manned flight to 
Mars in 2030, I fell to thinking that the US crew who would go would be 
currently Astronauts aged about 40. That is my personal conclusion. Bolden 
added in his speech "- and comes back to
 Earth and has lost his vision. Should we be thinking of that? I think we 
should be thinking of that". There is no doubt in my mind that a manned 
expedition to Mars is not yet possible and Bolden said we also had to look at 
new ways of communications in working up to it. Interesting that in discussions 
over dinner, Amsat-DL's proposed satellite mission to Mars, the dish at Bochum 
and the possible use of a 30 m dish elsewhere was also recognised as a 
potential contributor.
 
It seemed evident to me, too, that the compromises inherent in the design of 
the ISS were beginning to show. Roscosmos emphsised their interest in flying a 
separate vehicle unatennded by humans except at the beginning and end of its 
experiments, in order to take away the minimal disturbances describes by Bolden 
as "some astronaut jumping about on a treadmill", but also I think attitude 
changes in pitch, roll and yaw, which are corrected for to an extent in 
experiments, are also a potential problem to zero grvity experiments such as 
crystal growth or metallurgy. And it was evident to me that the data on ozone 
depletion by a JAXA experiment SMILES only touched the edges of the problem 
region due to the ISS inclination of 51.6 degrees.
 
The "elephant in the room" was China - there is no possibility of her joining 
any current space treaty as a nation. However I fell to wondering whether her 
commercial interests might not find a locker in the new commercial availability 
of experimental space on board the ISS - money talks - we shall see.
 
I stress tall the above is my personal observation, opinion and commentary, one 
day after the end of the conference. 
 
The Symposium was very stimulating and enjoyable, and I'd like to thank ESA and 
the organisers for inviting me.
 
73 de andy g0sfj
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