ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
→ ATV Albert Einstein
  In-flight Call Event

               Jerusalem - Milan - Munich
ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
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   his image of ATV Albert Einstein reveals the exhaust plumes as the 20-tonne craft fires some of its
  24 thrusters to adjust its approach to the International Space Station

                                                                       European Space Agency

                                                The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

                                 20607new-logo-E.indd 1                              12/20/11 12:36 PM

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
→ INTRODUCTION TO THE ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN
   INFLIGHT CALL EVENT

ESA is collaborating with the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Israeli Space
Agency, the Italian space agency ASI and the German Aerospace Center’s
Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics to organise a live call with ESA astronaut
Luca Parmitano from the International Space Station. The event will be held in
three locations: the Politecnico di Milano in Italy, the Technische Universität
München in Germany and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel.

The programme will start with lectures at all three universities on space
robotics and satellite technology, followed by an introduction to Europe’s
fourth Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV), named after Albert Einstein.
ESA’s ATV-4 mission manager, Alberto Novelli, will introduce ATV and talk
about the International Space Station and aspects of human spaceflight and
exploration in general.

A live connection to the International Space Station will be made and students
from the universities will ask questions to ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano.
Luca is on a 166-day mission on the Space Station taking part in around 20 ESA
experiments covering a range of disciplines.

ATV Albert Einstein, ESA’s supply and support spacecraft, was launched on
5 June 2013 from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. The vehicle is
one of the most reliable and complex spacecraft ever built in Europe and
has the largest cargo capability of all vehicles that visit the International
Space Station. The main objectives of this mission are to deliver 6.6 tonnes
of cargo and maintain the Station’s orbit for six months.

As part of ATV Albert Einstein’s cargo, ESA sent a number of copies of
documents from the Albert Einstein archives, maintained at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem. These folders were delivered to the Space Station
where Luca will sign them before they are sent back to Earth.

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
→ ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN
       INFLIGHT CALL EVENT

    - The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel
    - Technische Universität München, Germany
    - Politecnico di Milano, Italy

    All times in Central European Summer Time (CEST)
    Morning programme:
    Open to academia and specialised media, VIPs may attend

    9:30 - 10:00    Welcome coffee

    10:00 - 10:30   Welcome addresses at each location

    10:35 - 10:40 	Welcome address to all locations by ESA moderator, start of live
                    connections between sites

    10:40 - 12:45 	Expert lectures (each 40 minutes with 10 minutes for Q&A)
                    • “An Intelligent Alter-Ego on a Distant Planet”
                    	Prof. Amalia Ercoli Finzi, Politecnico di Milano, Italy
                    • 	“Space Robotics for On-Orbit Servicing, Astronaut Assistance
                       and Planetary Exploration”
                    	Prof. Alin Albu-Schäffer, DLR Institute of Robotics and
                       Mechatronics, Germany
                    • 	“Role of Satellite Technology in Weather and Climate Change
                       Research”
                    	Prof. Daniel Rosenfeld, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
                       Israel

    12:45 - 15:30   Lunch/Break

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
Afternoon programme
Open to academia, media, TV, and VIPs at each location

15:30 - 15:35 	Introduction to afternoon programme by ESA moderator

15:35 - 15:50 	Welcome addresses from each location (each 5 minutes)

15:50 - 16:05 	ATV Albert Einstein mission presentation
	Alberto Novelli, ESA ATV-4 Mission Manager

16:05 - 16:15 	ATV Albert Einstein video

16:15 - 16:45 	Introduction to Human Spaceflight and Exploration
                Alberto Novelli, ESA ATV-4 Mission Manager

16:45 - 17:05   Live call from space with ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano

17:05 - 17:15   Official closing of live event

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
→ Speakers

    Professor Amalia Ercoli Finzi
    Politecnico di Milano
    Italy

    Amalia Ercoli Finzi, former Director of the Department of Aerospace
    Engineering of Politecnico di Milano, has been working in the area of spaceflight
    dynamics for over 25 years, contributing in several space research areas such as
    space-mission design, attitude control, rendezvous and docking manoeuvres,
    dynamics and control of large space structures.

    At the moment she is the primary investigator of the SD2 experiment for the
    European Rosetta mission to Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko that will
    drill into the comet’s core and collect soil samples. She is also coordinator of
    Team Italia for the robotic A.M.A.L.I.A lunar mission.

    Prof. Finzi received the Gold Medal of the Italian Republic President in 2007
    for scientific merits. In 2012, she was awarded the Frank J. Malina Astronautics
    Medal and the Leonardo-UGIS prize.

    She is Member of the Technical Scientific Committee of ASI and a full member of
    the International Academy of Astronautics.

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
An intelligent Alter Ego on a distant planet

Since the very beginning of the space era, robotics have contributed to
exploration of celestial bodies, sending back spectacular images and huge
amounts of information on unexplored worlds helping to build our current
knowledge of the Solar System.

The lecture will present some technical solutions used for space robots,
with particular attention given to power production, locomotion, guidance
navigation and control, communications and thermal protection.

Like famous explorers of the past centuries, we are facing a great unknown:
not in person, but through an ‘alter ego mirabilis’, intelligent and smart machines
that allow us to explore virtually.

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ATV ALBERT EINSTEIN IN-FLIGHT CALL EVENT - JERUSALEM - MILAN - MUNICH
Professor Alin Albu-Schäffer
    DLR Institute of Robotics and Mechatronics
    Germany

    Alin Albu-Schäffer graduated in electrical engineering at the Technical University
    of Timisoara, in 1993 and received a PhD in automatic control from the Technical
    University of Munich in 2002. In 2012, he took over as head of the Institute of
    Robotics and Mechatronics at the German Aerospace Center DLR which he joined
    in 1995 as a PhD candidate.

    Alin is a professor at the Technical University of Munich, holding the Chair for
    Sensor-Based Robotic Systems and Intelligent Assistance Systems at the Computer
    Science Department. The DLR robotics institute is one of the largest and most
    renowned labs in the area of space robotics but also working on assistance
    robotics for industrial and medical applications. His personal research interests
    include robot design, modelling and control, nonlinear systems, flexible joint and
    variable compliance robots, impedance and force control, physical human-robot
    interaction and biologically-inspired robot design. He has received several awards,
    including the IEEE King-Sun Fu Best Paper Award of the Transactions on Robotics
    in 2012, several Best Paper Awards on international conferences as well as the DLR
    Science Award.

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Space Robotics for On Orbit Servicing, Astronaut Assistance, and
Planetary Exploration

The more we learn about our Solar System, the planets, their moons, asteroids
and comets, the more we want to land on these bodies, explore and analyse
their geology, and possibly find signs of life on these hostile worlds. Robots of
increasing complexity are being developed today to analyse samples like a
geologist or biologist would do on Earth.

Robots will play an ever increasing role closer to Earth as well by servicing
satellites, removing space debris or assisting astronauts during their daily work.
Robots should exempt humans from dangerous or monotonous tasks, increase
their working efficiency and allow them to concentrate on challenging scientific
and engineering work.

This talk will give an overview of the forefront of space robotics, DLR’s latest
developments as well as perspectives on the coming years.

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Professor Daniel Rosenfeld
     The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
     Israel

     Daniel Rosenfeld earned his academic degrees at The Hebrew University,
     followed by a post-doctorate at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in
     1986-1988 before returning to the Hebrew University as a professor.

     Prof. Rosenfeld did revolutionary work in fundamental physical problems
     that are central to the field of climate change such as the role of aerosols in
     precipitation-forming processes and their effects on storm intensity and on
     Earth’s energy budget. He is currently active in coordinating international
     research and designing satellite missions to study the impacts of
     man-made aerosols on clouds, precipitation and climate. His contributions
     were widely recognized by numerous international awards.

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Big impact of man-made tiny particles on weather and climate change

Global warming is caused by greenhouse gases reducing the amount of
cooling of thermal radiation from Earth to space compared to heating from
solar radiation. Whereas the effect of carbon dioxide emissions is well known,
little is known about the effect of manmade emissions of aerosols on our
climate such as from smoke and sulphuric particles. These particles cool
the world mainly by making the clouds brighter and covering larger areas
and reflect more solar radiation back to space. Our limitations in defining
this cooling effect dominates scientific uncertainty on global warming,
feeding public controversy.

This talk will discuss air pollution influences on cloud coverage and using
recently developed satellite techniques for imaging and quantifying
cloud-drop size and their impact on storms and Earth’s energy budget.

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→ Albert einstein
     Albert Einstein’s paper, The foundation                   With his theories of relativity and
     of the general theory of Relativity,                      the two-way relation between
     predicted that light beams would                          matter and energy (E=mc2),
     bend around massive objects. The                          Einstein is a major icon of the
     hypothesis was proven when British                        20th century. He was awarded
     astronomer Arthur Eddington observed                      the Nobel prize for physics at the
     light beams from distant stars bending                    age of 42.
     as they passed our Sun during a solar
     eclipse in 1919. This was considered                      ATV Albert Einstein also has
     conclusive proof that the theory was                      strong ties with Switzerland: part
     valid.                                                    of its structure and subsystems
                                                               are built by Swiss industry, such
     Einstein’s contributions to science                       as the racks, the late-access cargo
     overturned our perception of the                          lift, meteoroid debris protection
     Universe and his work is used to guide                    and critical electronic units.
     spacecraft. The scientist was born
     in 1879 in Germany, but studied and
     spent his early career in Switzerland,
     where he worked at the Patent
     Office in Bern. Here he developed his
     revolutionary ideas and published
     four fundamental scientific papers
     on the photoelectric effect, Brownian
     motion, special relativity and the
     mass–energy equivalence.

     Left: Albert Einstein lecturing in France in the 1920s.
     Right: First page of the manuscript The foundation of
     the general theory of relativity. (Albert Einstein
     Archives–Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

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↑ The International Space Station

     ↑ E
        SA astronaut Luca Parmitano during his first spacewalk on the International Space Station,
14     9 July 2013
↑ O
   n 5 June 2013, Ariane 5 lifted off from Europe‘s Spaceport in French Guiana with ESA’s fourth
  Automated Transfer Vehicle, Albert Einstein, en route to the International Space Station

↑ A
   TV Albert Einstein, Europe’s supply and support ferry, docked with the International Space
  Station on 15 June 2013                                                                           15
CONTACT

     eSA/eStec
     Communication office
     +31 71 565 3009
     hsocom@esa.int

     An ESA Human Spaceflight and Operations production
     Copyright © 2013 European Space Agency

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