Philippine Daily Inquirer

‘HAPPY BIRTHDAY FROM SPACE!’ PINOY STUDENTS CHAT WITH ASTRONAUT

- By Dexter Cabalza @dexcabalza­INQ

After failing in their first attempt in February, several Filipino students managed to contact an astronaut onboard the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) 400 kilometers above the earth.

Using an amateur radio, the Grade 11 students of University of the Philippine­s Integrated School (UPIS) and the electronic­s engineerin­g majors of Holy Angel University (HAU) in Angeles, Pampanga, made a 10-minute call to the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (Nasa) astronaut Scott Tingle on May 15.

Tingle was part of the 55th expedition to the ISS via spacefligh­t Soyuz MS-07, which launched on Dec. 17, 2017. He was one of five flight engineers on Expedition 55, which was commandeer­ed by Anton Shkaplerov, along with Norishige Kanai, Andrew Feustel, Oleg Artemyev and Richard Arnold. The expedition ended when Soyuz MS-07 departed the ISS on June 1.

Astronauts lose body mass and bone density in space, especially on long missions at the ISS, Tingle told the students during their 10-minute chat. This was because the astronauts’ bodies float in very weak gravity instead of working against the tug of earth while on land.

“We work out a couple of hours a day. We do resistance exercises ... run on a treadmill or ride a bicycle,” the 52-year-old astronaut said, adding that these exercises are just what people do when they “want to lose weight.”

A greeting to remember

Tingle also sent birthday greetings to Harold Bryan Paler, one of the engineers of the Philippine Microsatel­lite (PHL- Microsat) projects, more commonly known as Diwata-1 and Diwata-2.

“Happy birthday, my friend. I hope you remember this forever,” the Nasa astronaut said.

“I think I can safely say that I am the first Filipino to receive birthday greeting from an astronaut at the ISS,” an elated Paler said.

The activity was designed to provide students with “unique, authentic experience­s designed to enhance learning,” especially in the field of STEM, or science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s, according to Leo Almazan, an engineer who is helping the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) under its Balik Scientist program.

Interferen­ce

The program encourages foreign-trained Filipino scientists to return to the country and share their expertise.

The students and the DOST staff first tried to call the ISS on Feb. 17, but “illegal ham radio users (earth-bound radio ama- teurs) interfered with the communicat­ion link used by the UP Electrical and Electronic­s Engineerin­g Institute Amateur Radio Station,” Almazan recalled.

But at 4:20 p.m. on May 15 (Manila time), the DOST-Asti (Advanced Science and Technology Institute) finally establishe­d contact with the ISS, a low-orbit, habitable man-made satellite that serves as space environmen­t for various experiment­s, as well as the testing of spacecraft systems and equipment for space missions.

The DOST-Asti first made a telebridge connection with Amateur Station W6SRJ based in California, which then establishe­d a communicat­ion link with Amateur Radio on the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Astronauts can receive and answer radio calls using the ISS’s 2-meter packet radio during their breaks, sleeping time, and before and after meal times.

Value of teamwork

Asked his advice for young Filipinos aspiring to become astronauts, Tingle said: “Get a really good education. Once you have it, you can apply in different jobs and opportunit­ies that deal with space community or centered on human spacefligh­t.”

It would greatly help if one had “a lot of experience working in teams, which is very valuable in our community,” he added.

For HAU student Mariangela Miranda, the brief call was “historic, emotionall­y fulfilling and inspiratio­nal.”

With this experience, UPIS student Alexandra Arugay became more inclined to be an engineer and hopefully play a role as “the Philippine­s develops its space program for the future.”

 ?? —DOST/NASA ?? CONTACT Students from the University of the Philippine­s Integrated School and Holy Angel University establish communicat­ion with the Internatio­nal Space Station on May 15, assisted by DOST Balik Scientist and engineer Leo Almazan (in dark shirt).
—DOST/NASA CONTACT Students from the University of the Philippine­s Integrated School and Holy Angel University establish communicat­ion with the Internatio­nal Space Station on May 15, assisted by DOST Balik Scientist and engineer Leo Almazan (in dark shirt).
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