Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Summer Storm, Australia

 This summer in Victoria-an Australian state where island called Tasmania near touches a continent on small scale big geographic maps- so far looks much cooler than usual. Actually, since 2005 this picture of cooling-down warmest season has been repeated-a far cry from the heat of the nineties famous for apocalyptic visions of predicting the zero-reserve water reservoirs with all technical-economics consequences for “saving Australia” institutions involved. Skies surely do not know of advance carbon tax/price on carbon introduced locally might bring about to save a human world globally.   Well, life is going on pretending not so much happens in the air. 

Cold mornings have been followed by sun-radiated afternoons as a “no news is good news” seems to be a first victim of whatever oncoming inevitably.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Meeting Dr. Yi So-yeon

I’d just returned from meeting with Dr. Yi So-yeon, a South Korean cosmonaut, arranged by the Institution of Engineers Australia.
Also general information of her flight made news round a globe already, meeting a living history-that is what in Korea and books on a space discoveries she had been memorized-is really the event.
A not-so-big comfy IEA conference room was not surprisingly full with variety of members and graduate engineers some coming with kids, and Dr Yi So-yeon presentation was really eye-opening for many who just realized that her flight was executed as a part of the Russian-Korean space program cooperation.
There were many questions covering variety of aspects linked to her mission and attendees were really surprised by a Russian Orthodox clergy involvement into a flight routine while information of psychological preparedness, of which lack of clocks aboard and impossibility to follow indicators during the launching yielded a positive mark from a space researcher.
A rare info on sleeping conditions in the space had been provided and audience presented to a great extent by English-as-a-second-language participants kept a breath at cosmonaut’s Russian language modest proficiency revelations-well, I could not imagine myself flying high after a year in Korea if selected for a similar locally-conducted Korean space program. Really, a Korean scientist is right telling of willingness to work in a team and a friendly understanding of her communicating problems experienced along whole Russian project but not always in local shops.    
It is unclear what job Dr. So-yeon does recently but attempts of Dr. Andy Thomas, a first Australian astronaut to return from the Cape Canaveral in a birth country were at the time postponed because of no need by local employers for an employee “skilled in the space walking” as media reported (so, Paul Scully-Powers – who?).
Good luck Dr. Yi So-yean –and with skills in Russian acquired additionally.
Michael Kerjman