Avion Issue 7 Fall 2016

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| Issue 7 | Volume 146 | Tuesday, November 1, 2016 | theavion.com |

Image Courtesy: NASA

Astronaut Alumna Nicole Stott Shares Experiences, Recieves Gift Henry Neiberlien News Editor

What’s Inside

The Embry-Riddle Daytona branch of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics held another one of their tech talks this past Monday in the College of Aviation atrium with a very special guest. Nicole Stott is a graduate of the Embry-Riddle class of 1987, a member of the board of trustees, and she was a NASA astronaut. During her time at NASA she flew aboard the space shuttle Discovery twice and spent three months and two weeks across two separate stays aboard the ISS. She did not become an astronaut overnight, however, and even after working for NASA for over a decade it still took multiple application attempts and interviews before she was accepted into the program. After two to three years of preparation flying across the world to the ISS’s international partners, training

on both American and Russian systems, and becoming a NASA aquanaut visiting the undersea habitat of Aquarius, Stott would finally board the space shuttle Discovery for STS-128’s mission to the ISS. Stott described the launch as not being so bad at first with just the liquid fueled engines running for the first few seconds, but when the solid rocket boosters kicked in it felt like a “smack” and feeling as though multiple people were suddenly sitting on top of you. Seeing the ISS for the first time was a surreal experience and something Stott said she was very thankful for. After losing her father in a small plane crash many of her family and friends never thought she would want to fly again, but there she was 249 miles above the surface of the Earth aboard the largest spacecraft ever constructed. Stott said that “nothing prepares you for it,” and “I had to pinch myself, to make sure

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I was not dreaming.” During her first threemonth stay aboard the ISS she realized that although the experience of spaceflight itself is exciting, the people you spend it with is the best part. Nicole and her crewmates were productive but also had a lot of fun. Celebrating Halloween by constructing costumes out of spare parts around the space station, and welcoming the owner of Cirque de Soleil, Guy Laliberte, who flew to the station with his own money. Stott participated in a spacewalk in which she and her spacewalk partner had to sleep in the airlock to help reduce the nitrogen in their bodies and operated the Canadarm robotic arm to berth the Japanese HTV cargo spacecraft to the ISS. After her second trip to the ISS she returned on the final flight of space shuttle Discovery, Stott said she wishes the Shuttle fleet kept flying by saying “the shuttle is a beautiful vehicle for cargo and people to

and from the ISS.” After the conclusion of STS-133 Stott retired from the NASA astronaut office and began to look for ways to spread the word about her experience to as many people as possible. Aboard the ISS she became the first person to paint in space and thought she could use art to send a message. Stott now travels the globe spreading her message through sharing her artwork and photography.

asked them to try and 3-D print a model of the ISS. The model itself is quite impressive, measuring upwards of three feet wide and two feet long. The model was constructed by modeling each component in CATIA and printing them individually before finally assembling them into the finished model. The 3-D printed ISS will be displayed on campus, but the final location has yet to be decided.

Billy Nguyen/Avion Newspaper Nicole Stott is presented with the 3-D printed International Space Station by the students who created the model of the ISS. She flew on the ISS twice, as well as Space Shuttle Discovery on the STS 128 and STS 133 missions.

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When asked what was her favorite part of her experiences she said: “my favorite thing was all of it wrapped up together.” During the AIAA event, Stott was presented with a 3-D printed scale model of the International Space Station. A team of four students, Patrick Serafin, Francisco Pastrana, Collin Topolski, and Joel Vela, constructed this over an extended period as a personal project after Stott

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