How do ESA's astronauts prepare for space?
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- čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
- The European Space Agency (ESA) is currently training five astronaut candidates for future missions to the International Space Station and beyond. Their training programme consists of three phases: The first phase is basic training, which covers medical exams, fitness assessments, and space programmes and systems. The second phase, the pre-assignment training, is advanced training in specific areas such as systems training, vehicle training, robotics and EVA-training. The third phase is mission-specific training, which is tailored to the tasks and experiments that astronauts will perform during their mission. ESA's astronaut training programme also includes training for exploration of the lunar surface, as astronauts will need to apply their skills and knowledge to new challenges in future space missions beyond Earth orbit.
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The astronauts that are selected in the future will be travelers who represent all of humanity, proud of who those heroes are.
Good Luck 🌍 🇩🇪 🇵🇱 🇦🇹 🇨🇭 🇫🇷 🇪🇸 🇵🇹 🇮🇹 🇬🇧 🇮🇪 🇧🇪 🇳🇱 🇳🇴 🇸🇪 🇫🇮 🇬🇷 🇱🇺 🇨🇿 🇷🇴 🇪🇪
I will continue to dream too, of the next selection process. Next time I will be an even better candidate, becuase I will use my time, to hone new skills and experiences, while working towards creating my own mark in STEM.
Dream big! I’ll also be much better prepared for the next selection sometime in the early 2030s
@@AluminumOxide My optimistic guess is 2030, once the whole 2022 class has flown at least once. Also my hope is the maximum age will be 55, like with NASA. But I still have a way to go yet.
All the best🎉
Another amazing video, ESA! Thanks for sharing!
Cheers from Brazil!
Our pleasure Eduardo! Thank you for watching. 😊
🚀
Yey 🎉
I want To joine space no need sallery
How can joine your space
www.esa.int/About_Us/Careers_at_ESA
Third I think
Will ESA provide astronauts to NASA for Artemis and future Mars missions?
NASA only recruits from USA citizens
For providing the European Service Module I know they will have some seats for Artemis
@@ImieNazwiskoOK Yeah but will they have any people is the question. I'm not asking about the seats.
@@TrueSpace61 I'm quite certain that they will especially that they can
@@ImieNazwiskoOK Ok, awesome.
First
When can an "average person" be an astronaut, a space flighter? Or that's just sci-fi stuff and won't be a reality anytime soon?
If you cough up $52 million, you can get an extended stay for up to a month at the ISS.
Of course, being able to pay that amount stretches the definition of "Average person"...
If that sounds unreasonable. You'll have to wait untill the price to orbit is less than $20,000 per kilo.
So, a generation, give or take...
Right now, the closest thing to ‘average person’ (!) is the multi-hundred thousand dollar (US $) priced seats for short suborbital hops into space and back, via either of the two private companies, Blue Origin or Virgin Galactic. Keep in mind, those initially super-expensive ticket prices at the beginning of the ‘space tourist’ industry, will come down over time….but in my opinion, by the end of this decade, we’d be lucky for them to come down to below $100k per seat. (Still that’s better than 5 years ago, when they didn’t exist at all, right?). In terms of orbital flights: Billionaires - a couple so far- have already started buying and flying to orbit, & within 5 years, around the moon (the first around the moon flights are already scheduled). Again, the good news is, this is just the beginning of an industry that didn’t even exist beforehand; and it’s being driven primarily by one company, SpaceX, with it’s drive towards radically lower launch costs, full and rapid reusability, etc. SpaceX’s corporate goal with their current Starship design is to fly people to Mars hundreds at a time; but what that should mean to you is that that entire process by the end of the 1930s will likely- again, in my opinion- lead to ‘ticket prices’ to Low-Earth Orbit for ‘ordinary people’ under a hundred thousand dollars. That may not help me out much- I’m 68 now, and in (relatively) good health, but who knows what shape I’ll be in by, say, 1938 - but still, ‘economical’ access to space is improving faster, now, than it has been for decades. If you are under 60 years old now, you stand a decent chance of being able to at least hope to get to orbit - if it’s important enough to you! - by, say, 2040, in my opinion. - Dave Huntsman
@@dphuntsman Thank you very much dear sir!
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