Comunicato Stampa disponibile solo in lingua originale.
What is it really like to live in space? And what happens to the body in microgravity? Now, thanks to a new training course being offered by ESA’s Education and Space Medicine Offices, medical and biology university students can find out.
ESA’s Education Office is inviting BSc and MSc university students studying medicine, allied healthcare subjects, life, biomedical or biomedical sciences to apply to the Human Space Physiology training course. The course will be held between 30 January and 2 February 2017, when selected students will be invited to the #esa Academy Training and Learning Centre at ESA’s Redu Centre in Belgium.
Students will discover how spaceflight represents a significant physiological challenge for the human body. Having evolved in Earth’s gravity, our bodies must adapt when in microgravity. These changes to the human body must be understood in order to be able to develop effective strategies to support humans during prolonged missions to space.
During the four-day course, students will learn from #esa and external experts. They will learn about the range of approaches used to study the physiological effects of spaceflight, including various ground-based analogues and models of the space environment, such as long-term (head down) bed rest and over-wintering in Antarctica. Approaches to mitigate the effects of weightlessness on the human body will also be discussed.
In addition to face-to-face and videoconference lectures, students will work on a mini-project in groups of 4 or 5 and will present it to the other participants on the final day of the course. Topics will include major issues and challenges facing human spaceflight. These could be: Female health - how could/should female astronaut health be addressed? Should it be studied separately from that of males?; Bouncing babies: what could the biological effect of being born in partial gravity be on human development?
The students in Redu will be joined by students at the European Astronaut Centre (EAC) in Cologne, Germany, who are registered in partner programmes such as the Space Physiology & Health MSc run at King's College London (UK). The two sites will collaborate via video conferencing.
In summary, the students can expect to be introduced to the following topics:
Human Space Physiology research is performed both in space and on Earth
Interested students can download the application form here. The deadline for submission of completed applications is 28 November 2016 at 23:59pm CET.
More information on the press release
© Copyright 2024