Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques tells high school students their generation could visit Mars
MONTREAL Mars exploration is close enough that Canadian highschool students can dream of setting foot on the red planet, astronaut David Saint-Jacques told a group of Quebec students Thursday.
Saint-Jacques, who is currently training in Moscow, held a question-and-answer session by videoconference with four Quebec high schools.
Wearing his uniform and appearing against a bright yellow background, the Canadian astronaut said travel to Mars was out of reach for his own generation, but not for the next.
“On Mars, it’s plausible that we can go in 20, 25, 30 years, so do the math,” he told approximately 400 students from the Greater Montreal and western Quebec regions.
“The first people who will go to Mars are people who are about your age right now.”
While Saint-Jacques will have to content himself with sticking closer to Earth, the 48year-old will neverthless blast off for a space voyage of his own when he launches aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft later this year.
Saint-Jacques, who is trained as both an engineer and a doctor, will be the first Canadian aboard the space station since Chris Hadfield spent five months on it in 2012 and 2013.
On Thursday, Saint-Jacques spent about 40 minutes answering questions from students on topics including worklife balance, his physical fitness regime and how he’ll feel as he leaves Earth behind.
Omar Metaich, a Grade 8 student from Montreal’s College Jean-de-Brebeuf, asked Saint-Jacques how he’ll feel about being cut off from Earth, even if only for a short time.
“I’m expecting to be dazzled by the beauty of Earth when I first get to see it from orbit,” he said.
He also said he was looking forward to living in close quarters with his team.
“It’ll be an adventure,” he said. “We’ll be a little group, like being shipwrecked or climbers on a mountain.”
The answer impressed Metaich, who said he wouldn’t mind going into space himself one day.