Concordia has a strong delegation heading to the third annual Montreal Space Symposium on October 10 and 11 at the International Civil Aviation Organization headquarters.
Raye Kass, professor in the Department of Applied Human Science will discuss the possibility of human settlements on Mars. It’s something she knows a bit about as an advisor to the Mars One project, which aims to establish the first base on the red planet.
Kass, who has also served as the principal investigator on two separate space simulation missions, says a Mars settlement is the next giant leap for mankind.
“The world will be given a chance to fulfill their space exploration dreams and do something that has not been done since humans first stepped foot on the moon."
Women in the space industry
Stefanie Ruel is an assistant professor at the John Molson School of Business and a former Canadian Space Agency mission manager. She’s coming to the Space Symposium to discuss her research on the gendered histories of Canadian women who contributed to the Alouette I and II satellite missions.
“These women’s experiences in the burgeoning space industry must be part of our contemporary and future lexicon in such a way that their experiences are not lost to the past.”
Ruel hopes to inspire present and future professional women to embrace the rich historical heritage of Canadian women working in space.
Space + art + culture
Space Concordia’s current president Hannah Jack Halcro will share her paper that got accepted for the International Astronautical Congress 2018, relating art and culture to space.
“Human-space interaction reflects back on society in many ways: pop culture, space inventions adapted for grounded life, how we look at national borders, how we see commercial and government enterprises and what we think is plausible in our lifetimes."
Rocketry and health tech
Space Concordia rocketry lead Oleg Khalimonov, in the company of other Quebec university rocketry leads, will discuss student rocketry on a panel moderated by Adam Trumpour, Launch Canada Challenge founder.
Space Concordia health lead Amanda Spilkin will talk about the development of health technologies for deep space missions.
“Since the 1960s, astronauts have pushed the radii of space exploration, putting the human body to the test while exposing themselves to challenging environmental factors,” she says.
“As space missions grow longer and more ambitious, health monitoring becomes a primary factor in planning.”