Artemis Archives | University of Central Florida News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Fri, 24 Apr 2026 14:49:19 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Artemis Archives | University of Central Florida News 32 32 UCF, Industry Experts Share Insight on Evolution of Space Medicine /news/ucf-industry-experts-share-insight-on-evolution-of-space-medicine/ Fri, 24 Apr 2026 14:06:35 +0000 /news/?p=152631 As NASA continues to advance the Artemis program, UCF researchers and space experts are collaborating to ensure future travelers to the moon, Mars stay safe and healthy.

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Hours before Artemis II splashed down safely into the Pacific Ocean on April 10, UCF researchers, university partners, an astronaut, and the former head of NASA gathered to start developing new technologies to keep space travelers healthy.

They proclaimed there is no better place than UCF, the closest medical school to Kennedy Space Center, to create a new frontier in healthcare as humans prepare for longer missions to the moon, Mars and beyond.

Michal Masternak
Professor of Medicine Michal Masternak

鶹Ʒ SYou are in a global destination for medical innovation, 鶹Ʒ S Michal Masternak told participants in the Star Nona 2026 event in Lake Nona 鶹Ʒ Ss Medical City. An anti-aging and cancer researcher at the UCF College of Medicine, Masternak organized the event as part of the Lake Nona Research Council, which is focused on encouraging interdisciplinary scientific partnerships between industry, academia and healthcare.

Space medicine is one of the council 鶹Ʒ Ss priorities. Deep space travel and the commercialization of space bring unique health challenges that science is just beginning to explore. The College of Medicine 鶹Ʒ Ss focuses on how factors such as microgravity, radiation and isolation impact the human body in space and how that knowledge can drive innovation into diagnostics, treatment and disease prevention for patients on Earth.

Former NASA Administrator and U.S. Senator Bill Nelson told attendees the Artemis voyage 鶹Ʒ Ss return to the moon should inspire space medicine experts to make new discoveries.

鶹Ʒ SWe 鶹Ʒ Sre in a whole new era, an exciting era, of space exploration that makes this time so special, 鶹Ʒ S Nelson said.

Star Nona 鶹Ʒ Ss goal was to bring together experts to understand current research on the health impacts of space travel and what challenges need to be addressed as more professional and commercial space travelers go to the moon and beyond.

Robert Curbeam and Bill Nelson
Former NASA astronaut Robert Curbeam (left) and former NASA Administrator and Florida senator Bill Nelson (right) at the Star Nona 2026 event.

The Physical Challenges of Space Flight

Former NASA astronaut Robert Curbeam holds the record for most spacewalks on a single mission. He described how the body feels during launch and splashdown when G-forces are so strong you must remind yourself to breathe. He presented with his former NASA flight surgeon, Smith Johnson, now a faculty member at UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss new Center for Aerospace and Extreme Environments Medicine (CASEEM). The two discussed the important relationship between physicians and space travelers before, during and after a mission.

鶹Ʒ SI loved being an astronaut and flying space shuttles, 鶹Ʒ S Curbeam says. 鶹Ʒ SThe only problem with space travel is that not a lot of people get to do it. 鶹Ʒ S

Your Brain Actually Shifts in Space

Living in space causes the body 鶹Ʒ Ss fluids to move up to the head and brain. But symptoms of that condition do more than cause puffy faces. Space travel actually causes the brain to shift. Jogi Pattisapu, of the Hydrocephalus and Neuroscience Institute, said as astronauts go to Mars for years-long missions and settle on the moon, scientists will have to understand how living in space affects brain function and create predictive tests and preventative measures. Eye health will be key, as fluid buildup has caused spaceflight-associated neuro-ocular syndrome (SANS) in 70% of astronauts on the International Space Station, leading to farsightedness, optic nerve swelling and eyeball flattening.

鶹Ʒ SWhat are we going to do if the pilot goes blind 210 million miles from Earth? 鶹Ʒ S he said.

Team Dynamics in Space

Shawn Burke
UCF Institute for Simulation and Training Professor Shawn Burke

Interpersonal communication is key to any team 鶹Ʒ Ss success, but how do relationships change for crews in confined spaces and face additional challenges such as sleep deprivation, isolation and differences in rank and roles. Shawn Burke and Stephen Fiore from UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss Institute for Simulation and Training have researched team dynamics in space to understand and prevent collaboration failures that can impact mission success.
_Stephen Fiore
Their research has also identified the formal and informal roles crew members play in encouraging positive social interactions and teamwork, especially in long-term missions. Missions to Mars may take up to 36 months and include 20-minute communications delays to and from Mission Control. Team dynamics will impact performance, mental health and affect, Burke said, because 鶹Ʒ Syou 鶹Ʒ Sre stuck with the people you have. 鶹Ʒ S

 

Conducting Medical Research in Microgravity: Everything 鶹Ʒ Ss Upside Down

Alain Berinstain, director of the Florida Space Institute at UCF.
Florida Space Institute Director Alain Berinstain

The weightlessness of space provides a unique research environment for new discoveries in areas including nutrient production, waste treatment, crystallization and biomanufacturing, said Alain Berinstain, director of the Florida Space Institute at UCF.

鶹Ʒ STerrestrially, whenever space can make a difference, it’s a great economic driver, 鶹Ʒ S he said.

In space, air doesn 鶹Ʒ St slow down processes, he explained, so experiments that involve weight, separation, sedimentation, fluid flow and buoyancy change. His advice to researchers considering space as a lab?

鶹Ʒ STurn your experiment upside down. Does it still work? If the answer is no, you have a lot of work to do. 鶹Ʒ S

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UCF_Michal Masternak UCF_Bill-Nelson_Robert-Curbeam Shawn Burke Professor Shawn Burke was recognized for her exceptional contributions to advancing the science and practice of industrial-organizational psychology, as well as her sustained impact on the professional community. The distinction of SIOP Fellow is awarded to individuals who have made significant, enduring contributions to research, leadership and application within the field. (Photo by Antoine Hart) UCF_Stephen Fiore Alain-Berinstain_FSI Director Florida Space Institute Director Alain Berinstain
Artemis II Brings Unique Space Medicine Opportunities /news/artemis-ii-brings-unique-space-medicine-opportunities/ Tue, 31 Mar 2026 15:50:41 +0000 /news/?p=151973 As astronauts travel closer to the moon than any human has in more than 50 years, physicians and scientists will learn more about how space travel affects physical and mental health.

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NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss upcoming Artemis II mission will witness astronauts orbiting the moon for the first time in more than half a century 鶹Ʒ S providing new opportunities for space medicine research, UCF experts say.

The mission will include multiple health studies on the four astronauts to determine how radiation, microgravity, isolation and other factors impact their physical health, mind and behavior 鶹Ʒ S crucial information that will help pave the way for future lunar surface missions and develop our understanding about humans 鶹Ʒ S deep space capabilities.

Thanks to new technology and modern medicine, researchers have better ways to understand the impact of space flight on human health.

鶹Ʒ SArtemis II is both a historic and biomedically important mission, 鶹Ʒ S says  Emmanuel Urquieta, the UCF College of Medicine 鶹Ʒ Ss vice chair for aerospace medicine and director of the university 鶹Ʒ Ss new Center for Aerospace and Extreme Environments Medicine (CASEEM).

鶹Ʒ SFor the first time since Apollo 17, humans will travel beyond the Earth 鶹Ʒ Ss magnetic field. That matters enormously from a research perspective, because now we have technology to thoroughly understand the health impact of embarking into deep space. The knowledge gained from Artemis II will help shape the future of safe human space exploration and drive innovations that can benefit medicine here on Earth and help us start preparing us for a mission to Mars. 鶹Ʒ S

View of crescent Earth from moon's surface
The crescent Earth rises above the lunar horizon in this photograph taken from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in lunar orbit during NASA’s final lunar landing mission in the Apollo program. (Photo courtesy of NASA)

The Space Coast 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Medicine

As the closest medical school to the Kennedy Space Center, UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Medicine is charting a new frontier in healthcare as humans prepare for longer missions to the moon and Mars, and commercial space flights take more civilians into space.

The goal: explore how factors such as microgravity, radiation and isolation impact the human body in space and how that knowledge can drive innovation into diagnostics, treatment and disease prevention on Earth.

To further those efforts, UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss CASEEM includes faculty experts in medicine, engineering, computer science, psychology, arts and educational leadership. This interdisciplinary group will work together to research and develop new technologies for keeping space travelers healthy, as well as soldiers on military missions, deep sea explorers and mountain climbers.

black and white photo of four astronauts walking through steel tunnel in their space suits
Artemis II crewmembers NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, commander; Victor Glover, pilot; Christina Koch, mission specialist; and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy Hansen, mission specialist; are led by Bill Owens of the Closeout Crew from the elevator at the 275-foot level of the mobile launcher to the crew access arm as they prepare to board their Orion spacecraft atop NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Space Launch System rocket during the Artemis II countdown demonstration test. (Photo Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky)

What Lies Ahead for Artemis II 鶹Ʒ Ss Astronauts

  • Understanding Radiation Exposure Effects

Traveling to the moon 鶹Ʒ S which humans haven 鶹Ʒ St returned to since 1972 鶹Ʒ S means astronauts will go beyond Earth 鶹Ʒ Ss Van Allen belts, which protect humans from cosmic radiation and solar storms. Space travelers to the International Space Station stay within Earth 鶹Ʒ Ss magnetic field. During their 10-day mission, Artemis II is anticipated to break Apollo 13 鶹Ʒ Ss record (248,655 miles) for the farthest distance humans have traveled from Earth.

Fifty years ago, researchers could do little more than measure radiation. This time will be different, says UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss William 鶹Ʒ SEd 鶹Ʒ S Powers, chief medical officer of CASEEM and the former chief of NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Medical Operations branch where he was a primary medical support physician for six shuttle missions.

鶹Ʒ SMedical knowledge, technology and the ability to diagnose disease have advanced significantly since then, 鶹Ʒ S he says.

Physicians and scientists will be able to determine how radiation impacts cells, organs, blood proteins and other molecular functions.

Artemis crew members will carry dosimeters in their pockets that measure radiation exposure in real time. Monitors inside the Orion spacecraft will also gather radiation information throughout the flight for future analysis.

An astronaut suffering a medical condition in space is always a concern, but deep space travel brings additional challenges, Powers explains. While astronauts on the International Space Station can be returned to Earth in about a day, as happened recently when a crew member became ill, returning from the moon may take several days or more.

鶹Ʒ SNone of the four astronauts on this flight is a physician, 鶹Ʒ S Powers says. 鶹Ʒ SAnd a space capsule certainly doesn 鶹Ʒ St have the same equipment you 鶹Ʒ Sd have in a hospital emergency room. 鶹Ʒ S

  • Does Space Flight Reduce Immunity?

Previous research has shown that spaceflight missions alter the and reactivate dormant viruses in the human body. As part of the Artemis II mission, NASA will conduct an AVATAR (A Virtual Astronaut Tissue Analog Response) experiment that will investigate how deep space impacts specific cells and tissues as well as some vital bodily functions including immune system responses.

For this experiment, NASA-funded scientists created 鶹Ʒ Sorgan-on-a-chip 鶹Ʒ S devices that contain each astronaut 鶹Ʒ Ss bone marrow cells. This technology allows scientists to examine molecular changes and cell function.

Closeup of purple gloved hand holding clear small chip between two fingertips
Organ-on-a-chip device (Photo Credit: Emulate)

鶹Ʒ SWith this technology we can see how the body responds to stimuli across the whole mission, 鶹Ʒ S says Jennifer Fogarty, CASEEM 鶹Ʒ Ss chief scientist who came to UCF after serving as chief scientist for NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Human Research Program. 鶹Ʒ SThis capability will help us map the body 鶹Ʒ Ss molecular changes with tissue/organ function and much better predictive capabilities. 鶹Ʒ S

As the 鶹Ʒ Sorgan-on-a-chip 鶹Ʒ S technology advances and proves accurate, it will allow NASA physicians to provide personalized and proactive medicine to astronauts because they will be able to predict a crew member 鶹Ʒ Ss biological response to space flight. Such technology could be used before NASA sends an actual crew to Mars. The space agency could place the crew 鶹Ʒ Ss personalized chips on unmanned flights to the Red Planet to better understand the potential health risks for each individual.

鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss basically sending small versions of astronauts to Mars before we send astronauts to Mars, 鶹Ʒ S Fogarty says.

Three male and one female astronaut in blue NASA jumpsuits stand side by side on tarmac with NASA white jet behind them
The crew of Artemis II: Jeremy Hansen, Christina Koch, Reid Wiseman and Victor Glover. (Photo courtesy of NASA)
  • Teamwork and Behavior

Selecting an astronaut crew that will perform well under the stresses of space flight is always a top NASA priority. But deep space missions present additional personnel challenges, including communication delays, increased isolation and resource constraints.

Astronauts on moon and Mars missions also must live in a capsule that is significantly smaller than the International Space Station, highlighting the need for crews to work together seamlessly and be able to manage any conflicts.

The Artemis flight will conduct an experiment called ARCHeR (Artemis Research for Crew Health and Readiness) that will evaluate how astronauts perform individually and as a team during the mission.

They will wear sleep and movement monitors before, during and after the mission to evaluate their cognition and team dynamics.

鶹Ʒ SYou watch the astronauts on TV, and it looks so easy, 鶹Ʒ S Fogarty says. 鶹Ʒ SBut human performance is critical in space. You have multiple duties to conduct and you 鶹Ʒ Sre always pushing operations. So we need to understand how the team performs, their reserve and resilience. The mission itself is the experiment. 鶹Ʒ S

Star Nona 2026

UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss leading space medicine experts, valued strategic partners and an astronaut who holds NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss record for spacewalks will gather April 10 in Lake Nona 鶹Ʒ Ss Medical City to discuss how they can work together to keep space travelers healthy and use that research to create groundbreaking clinical innovations on Earth.

The 鶹Ʒ SStar Nona 2026 鶹Ʒ S event is led by the Lake Nona Research Council, which is focused on encouraging interdisciplinary scientific partnerships between industry, academia and healthcare.

The council includes physicians and researchers from UCF, Orlando Health, AdventHealth, the Florida Space Institute, the Orlando VA Medical Center, Nemours Children 鶹Ʒ Ss Health, business and industry.

For more information, including how to register for the event, visit www.ucf.edu/news/progressing-the-final-frontier-of-medicine-space.

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NASA-Earthrise-over-the-moon-1972 The crescent Earth rises above the lunar horizon in this photograph taken from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in lunar orbit during National Aeronautics and Space Administration's (NASA) final lunar landing mission in the Apollo program. While astronauts Eugene A. Cernan, commander, and Harrison H. Schmitt, lunar module pilot, descended in the Lunar Module (LM) "Challenger" to explore the Taurus-Littrow region of the moon, astronaut Ronald E. Evans, command module pilot, remained with the Command and Service Modules (CSM) "America" in lunar orbit. (Photo courtesy of NASA) NASA-Artemis II – crew Artemis II crewmembers NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, commander; Victor Glover, pilot; Christina Koch, mission specialist; and CSA (Canadian Space Agency) astronaut Jeremy Hansen, mission specialist; are led by Bill Owens of the Closeout Crew from the elevator at the 275-foot level of the mobile launcher to the crew access arm as they prepare to board their Orion spacecraft atop NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Space Launch System rocket during the Artemis II countdown demonstration test. (Photo Credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky) Emulate_Organ-Chip_blue_glove_2-Photo Credit- Emulate Organ Chip (Photo Credit: Emulate) NASA Artemis II crew (Photo courtesy of NASA)
UCF Online, Non-traditional Student Supports NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Artemis II Mission /news/ucf-online-non-traditional-student-supports-nasas-artemis-ii-mission/ Thu, 26 Feb 2026 18:49:07 +0000 /news/?p=151195 Amy Lendian is helping lead launch support operations for NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss first crewed lunar flyby flight in 50 years while striving toward her life goal of earning a college degree through UCF Online.

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As a 67-year-old retiree, Amy Lendian wants you to know it 鶹Ʒ Ss never too late. Never too late to start over; to go for your dream career; to earn your college degree.

When the UCF Online history student assumes her spot at the console at Kennedy Space Center to lead the facility systems engineers for the upcoming historic Artemis II launch, that affirmation will echo within her once more.

鶹Ʒ SI always believed in myself and felt that I could do this, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SIt really is never too late. 鶹Ʒ S

Woman with curly, sandy blonde hair in business jacket sits at console with screens and keyboard
Amy Lendian at the console for Artemis I’s first launch attempt.

Turning a Setback Into a Comeback

Lendian spent the majority of her adult life building her career as a fire protection engineer, helping design sprinkler systems and other fire safety infrastructure.

Then the COVID-19 pandemic happened. The construction industry came to a screeching halt. In her 60s, she suddenly faced unemployment.

鶹Ʒ SI thought, 鶹Ʒ SWho is going to want to hire me in my 60s? 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SBut I made it my job to find a job. And not just any job. I set out for my dream job in the aerospace industry. 鶹Ʒ S

She logged in every day on her home computer to research job listings, dressed as if she was headed to an office. She sought career counseling. She joined virtual seminars to learn new software and online tools she knew she 鶹Ʒ Sd need to master if she wanted to break into the field. She learned how to rework her resume to leverage her relevant skills.

Her strategy and persistence paid off. She got a call back for a fire protection systems engineer position on base at Kennedy Space Center.

Selfie of woman in pink NASA polo shirt standing in front of orange and white rocket on launchpad at night
Amy Lendian

Finding Her Place in Space

On her first day at KSC, she attended a briefing where they discussed etiquette while serving on the console. She says it took her a moment to process what she was hearing.

鶹Ʒ SI stayed up to watch Neil Armstrong walk on the moon. I have a photo of myself as a kid standing in front of an Apollo rocket. And you 鶹Ʒ Sre saying you want me to be on the console during a launch?! 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SI thought, 鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm here. I arrived. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S

Lendian served on the console for the Artemis I launch in November 2022.

Although she has since retired from her formal position with KSC and moved to Chicago, she is still employed as a part-time consultant and will be there again for Artemis II managing the fire protection systems on the launchpad.

Woman in blue button down long sleeve shirt and blank pants stands in front of screen at front of classroom, speaking to women seated
Amy Lendian was invited to speak about her career journey at a 2026 spring semester Women and Leadership honors class, taught by Anne Bubriski.

Finishing What She Started

Her late-stage career change inspired her to consider other dreams she had yet to realize. A big one has been nearly 50 years in the making.

Lendian was 19 years old when she attempted college the first time. She enrolled in the University of South Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss electrical engineering program in the late 1970s. But after three years, she stopped her studies because she got married and needed to support her new family.

In 2021, she decided to resuscitate her dream of a college degree. She transferred her old credits into the program at Eastern Florida State College, earned her associate 鶹Ʒ Ss degree and looked to enroll in one of UCF Online 鶹Ʒ Ss degree programs so she could manage school with her full-time job.

The history degree she is working toward is affiliated with one of the top online institutions. UCF ranks No. 6 for Online Bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss Programs nationally according to the U.S. News & World Report.

鶹Ʒ SI want that bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss degree, 鶹Ʒ S Lendian says. 鶹Ʒ SI am doing this for me. I am going to do something that I love (history). And I am going to graduate. 鶹Ʒ S

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2022-08-29 Amy Lendian at console for Artemis I first launch attempt Amy Lendian at the console for Artemis I's first launch attempt. Amy-Lendian-NASA-Rocket-Launch Amy Lendian Amy-Lendian-Women-Leadership-class-UCF Amy Lendian was invited to speak about her career journey at a 2026 spring semester Women and Leadership honors class, taught by Anne Bubriski.
UCF to Play Key Role in NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Artemis IV Mission /news/ucf-to-play-key-role-in-nasas-artemis-iv-mission/ Mon, 08 Dec 2025 15:07:41 +0000 /news/?p=150206 Researcher Phil Metzger 鶹Ʒ S00MS 鶹Ʒ S05PhD prepares for the first real-world test of lunar dust theory that could have implications for activities being planned on the moon 鶹Ʒ Ss surface.

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UCF will play a key role in a newly announced NASA Artemis IV mission partnership that aims to, for the first time, directly test and calibrate a groundbreaking new theory developed by UCF Director of the Stephen W. Hawking Center for Microgravity Research and Education and planetary scientist Phil Metzger 鶹Ʒ S00MS 鶹Ʒ S05PhD on .

UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss expertise will help drive the success of DUSTER, a payload designed specifically to capture and measure dust behavior during spacecraft and human operations on the moon. Lunar Outpost 鶹Ʒ Ss Mobile Autonomous Prospecting Platform (MAPP) rover will support NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss DUSTER (Dust and plaSma environmenT survEyoR) investigation, selected for development through the Artemis IV Deployed Instruments program. The instruments will be built at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at CU Boulder.

DUSTER represents the best opportunity to date to evaluate the theory on the physics of dust erosion, with implications for the activities being planned on the moon 鶹Ʒ Ss surface. The Artemis IV mission is due to launch in 2028.

Man with graying beard wearing a gray buttondown shirt and dark suit speaks on stage
Phil Metzger gave the closing address at the Economist Space Economy Summit, held at UCF during Space Week this year.

Testing Rocket Exhaust and Dust Erosion

This theory introduces a fundamentally new understanding of the behavior of gas in the boundary layer, the thin region where rocket exhaust meets the moon 鶹Ʒ Ss surface. This new physics shows how the gas flow in that layer lifts dust grains 鶹Ʒ Ssomething no previous model could adequately explain. Before this breakthrough, NASA lacked a method to reliably predict how much lunar dust erosion a landing or departing spacecraft would generate, and therefore could not fully estimate how much sandblasting damage would occur to hardware on the moon.

However, several key parameters in this new model cannot be measured accurately using existing lunar data or Earth-based experiments. On Earth, large-scale testing is limited: rocket exhaust cannot be blasted into a vacuum chamber without destroying the vacuum, and gravity cannot be reduced to lunar levels for the necessary full-scale trials.

DUSTER will change that. By collecting data during actual Starship Human Landing System operations on the moon, DUSTER will allow scientists to measure these long-elusive parameters directly in the lunar environment 鶹Ʒ S providing the highest-fidelity test yet of Metzger 鶹Ʒ Ss theory.

鶹Ʒ SOne of DUSTER 鶹Ʒ Ss capabilities is measuring the dust blown by rocket exhaust as the Starship Human Landing System lifts off and departs from the moon, 鶹Ʒ S Metzger says.

In this project, University of Colorado Boulder Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics senior researcher Xu Wang, who serves as principal investigator, will analyze upstream plasma conditions. UCF will interpret measurements of dust ejected during the Human Landing System liftoff.

鶹Ʒ SUCF brings to this project its expertise in the science of how rocket exhaust blows soil and dust. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S Phil Metzger 鶹Ʒ S00MS 鶹Ʒ S05PhD, UCF planetary scientist

鶹Ʒ SUCF brings to this project its expertise in the science of how rocket exhaust blows soil and dust, 鶹Ʒ S says Metzger.

The findings generated by DUSTER will directly inform NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss long-term plans for sustained lunar operations, providing critical insights to protect habitats, instruments, and other assets as human presence on the moon grows. As NASA plans to deliver major infrastructure to the lunar surface, Artemis IV presents a new opportunity to address this outstanding engineering challenge of lunar exploration.

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phil metzger – space summit Phil Metzger gave the closing address at the Economist Space Economy Summit, held at UCF during Space Week this year.
UCF Student Explores Bridges Between Health in Space and Health on Earth /news/ucf-student-explores-bridges-between-health-in-space-and-health-on-earth/ Wed, 25 Jun 2025 13:20:44 +0000 /news/?p=147919 Luis Jimenez-Chavez 鶹Ʒ S22 is part of multiple research teams making progress for space travel, biomedical science, cancer research 鶹Ʒ S and for his family 鶹Ʒ Ss sacrifices.

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In the lead-up to a conversation with Luis Jimenez-Chavez 鶹Ʒ S22, it might be a good idea to prepare the brain for a serious workout. He 鶹Ʒ Sll be talking about his research, which spans microgravity, mitochondria, galactic cosmic radiation, biophysics, bone density and the complexities of DNA. At some point, the conversation will turn to his collaboration with NASA, the impact of his research on astronaut immunology, its potential implications for cancer patients and his presentation to a Nobel Prize winning cancer researcher. It will eventually land on an amazing family background that puts all of the above into proper perspective.

Jimenez-Chavez answers his phone from a park bench and immediately puts the mind at ease.

鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm just a normal guy, 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SI happen to find research exciting. It feels good to make any kind of breakthrough. I can 鶹Ʒ St get enough of it. 鶹Ʒ S

The accomplishments of this 鶹Ʒ Snormal guy 鶹Ʒ S read like those from someone looking back on a 25-year career when in fact Jimenez-Chavez is a master 鶹Ʒ Ss student in biomedical sciences at UCF. He 鶹Ʒ Ss only 26. He earned a bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss degree in biomedical sciences four years ago and decided instead of going to medical school he would first spend time exploring everything he 鶹Ʒ Ss heard about since childhood: science, space and medicine.

It becomes clear that something stronger than worldly success is driving this guy.

鶹Ʒ SOh, I should tell you I 鶹Ʒ Sm also a music producer, 鶹Ʒ S Jimenez-Chavez says. 鶹Ʒ SMusic is another process that involves creativity and collaboration 鶹Ʒ S similar to being a scientist. Honestly, none of this feels like work to me. By mixing up endeavors, I never feel burned out, even when I 鶹Ʒ Sm putting in 80 hours a week and going a dozen different directions. 鶹Ʒ S

Jimenez-Chavez pours most of those hours into research that could provide links between health in space and diseases on Earth. It all started in June 2024 when he went as a fellow for NASA to the Johnson Space Center (JSC) in Houston for what was supposed to be a literature review on the effects of radiation on mitochondria.

鶹Ʒ SI was told not to expect too much, 鶹Ʒ S Jimenez-Chavez says.

On his first day at JSC, he saw a whiteboard with drawings of molecular receptors, which he 鶹Ʒ Sd learned about in a neuroscience class at UCF. When the principal investigator, Honglu Wu, heard Jimenez-Chavez offer thoughts about what might be missing from the diagrams, he invited Jimenez-Chavez to join the research team in the Radiation Biophysics Lab, where they study the impact of space travel on astronauts at the cellular level.

鶹Ʒ SThere are complications when forces in space push bodily fluids around, 鶹Ʒ S Jimenez-Chavez says. 鶹Ʒ SWhen the balance of human cells is compromised, it can cause disruptions with our immunities. The last thing NASA wants to do is send people to Mars and then find out they developed cancer as a consequence. Immune health is one of the many factors NASA has to consider. 鶹Ʒ S

Recognizing a potential parallel with cancer research, Wu and Jimenez-Chavez met with immunologists at the MD Anderson Cancer Center to discuss their findings. This led to a co-authorship with researchers from the institute and, later, an audience with Nobel Laureate James Allison to explain their findings.

鶹Ʒ SA highlight of my life, 鶹Ʒ S says Jimenez-Chavez. 鶹Ʒ S[Allison] was fascinated because we 鶹Ʒ Sre attempting to go as far upstream as possible in finding root causes of cancer, all the way to the mitochondria that power the cells. Who knows? Maybe this could help revolutionize cancer treatment. Any breakthrough would be the result of another two-way bridge between the benefits of space research and medical care for people on Earth. 鶹Ʒ S

This summer, Jimenez-Chavez is bringing what he learned at Johnson Space Center to Kennedy Space Center where actual astronauts will be part of the research. He 鶹Ʒ Ss also continuing a project with Melanie Coathup at UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Medicine 鶹Ʒ Sto increase my knowledge. 鶹Ʒ S Their study explores the effects of cosmic radiation on bones and the possibility that energy in space can break DNA coding.

Jimenez-Chavez admits that sometimes he 鶹Ʒ Ss so immersed in science, medicine and NASA that he forgets to take a step back and realize what he 鶹Ʒ Ss doing.

鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm living a dream, 鶹Ʒ S he says before correcting himself. 鶹Ʒ SActually, I 鶹Ʒ Sm living a lot of dreams. 鶹Ʒ S

In June, Jimenez-Chavez will speak to a group of ambitious 18-25-year-olds living in Peru.

鶹Ʒ SSpace biology in that part of Peru isn 鶹Ʒ St even a dream, 鶹Ʒ S Jimenez-Chavez says. 鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss a fantasy. 鶹Ʒ S He knows this because he 鶹Ʒ Ss listened to his family talk about growing up in that same region. His father lived with 11 siblings in a mud house (two other siblings died of malnutrition), yet he and his brothers studied and worked hard enough to become doctors and pharmacists. The pay in Peru was a fraction of what the professions pay in the U.S., so Jimenez-Chavez 鶹Ʒ Ss parents decided to immigrate to the U.S. to provide a better life for Luis, even if it meant starting over.

鶹Ʒ SMom and dad are my superheroes. For the first 10 years of my life, we lived in an uncle 鶹Ʒ Ss basement while they learned English, went to pharmacy school and worked as custodians. Three other uncles lived in that house, too. One of them slept in a closet. They were all working to reestablish themselves in America as doctors. I was always surrounded with medical talk, diagrams of hearts and science textbooks. Instead of imagining characters from children 鶹Ʒ Ss books, I 鶹Ʒ Sd go to bed thinking about active galactic nuclei and supernovas. 鶹Ʒ S

Jimenez-Chavez credits the master 鶹Ʒ Ss program at UCF for his ability to speak so easily about high-level topics, but he also points to his childhood as proof of the impact of an environment on learning 鶹Ʒ S not so much the place as the people in it.

鶹Ʒ SThe dreams of my uncles rubbed off on me, but mostly it was my dad, 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SHis dream was to be a scientist at NASA and find cures for illnesses. He didn 鶹Ʒ St personally live his NASA dream, but 50% of me 鶹Ʒ S Luis 鶹Ʒ S is my dad 鶹Ʒ Ss DNA. So, whenever I 鶹Ʒ Sm at NASA, it 鶹Ʒ Ss like he 鶹Ʒ Ss there, too. That 鶹Ʒ Ss why I enjoy conversations like this 鶹Ʒ S because everything I discuss is an accomplishment for my entire family. 鶹Ʒ S

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NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Kennedy Space Center Marks New Chapter for Florida Space Industry /news/nasas-kennedy-space-center-marks-new-chapter-for-florida-space-industry/ Thu, 09 Jan 2025 19:51:59 +0000 /news/?p=144728 The agreement highlights the partnership and serves as the official start to partnering activities, with Florida now the only state with a university consortium affiliated with one of NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss centers.

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The future of research and technology at NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida expanded Wednesday, as KSC center director and charter members in the Florida University Space Research Consortium signed a memorandum of understanding in research and development to assist with missions and contribute to NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss moon to Mars exploration approach.

Officials from the consortium 鶹Ʒ S designated in 2024 as the state 鶹Ʒ Ss official space research entity 鶹Ʒ S NASA leaders, and guests participated in the signing ceremony held at KSC, marking a critical milestone in a partnership to advance research, technology development, education and communication between the spaceport and the state 鶹Ʒ Ss growing space industry.

鶹Ʒ STogether, academia, government, and industry are bridging the gap between ideas and real-world applications, achieving far more together than we ever could on our own. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S Alexander N. Cartwright, UCF president

鶹Ʒ SThrough this agreement, NASA will benefit in new and exciting ways from our longtime partnership with the universities that make Florida shine, 鶹Ʒ S says NASA Administrator Bill Nelson. 鶹Ʒ SAs we move deeper into this golden era of space exploration, a new generation of thinkers and leaders will lead the way 鶹Ʒ S thinkers and leaders like the researchers, faculty and students of the Artemis generation, whom we are pleased to work with through the consortium. 鶹Ʒ S

The creation of the consortium was the result of more than a year of effort by leaders at KSC, the University of Florida, UCF, and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. The agreement highlights the partnership and serves as the official start to partnering activities, with Florida now the only state with a university consortium affiliated with one of NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss centers.

Present at the event was Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.

鶹Ʒ SIt was great to visit the Space Coast Jan. 8 to announce the Florida University Space Research Consortium 鶹Ʒ S our state 鶹Ʒ Ss official space research entity. Home to a thriving aerospace industry and world-class higher education institutions, Florida is the ideal place to launch this initiative,” DeSantis says. “We are primed to lead the nation in developing a blueprint for state-space partnerships into the future. 鶹Ʒ S

The mission of the consortium is to foster a symbiotic relationship between NASA KSC and Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss universities to drive innovation in space exploration, research, and technology through academic collaboration, joint projects, and workforce development.

鶹Ʒ SThe launch of the Florida University Space Research Consortium is a significant milestone for our state 鶹Ʒ Ss aerospace sector, bringing together our world-class education system with cutting edge research and development, 鶹Ʒ S says Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez. 鶹Ʒ SThis consortium will undoubtedly further strengthen and deepen Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss position as the leader in the global aerospace economy. 鶹Ʒ S

The memorandum of understanding marks the dawn of a new era of cooperation between the Florida spaceport and the state 鶹Ʒ Ss university system, starting with the three charter universities with plans to expand to other state universities interested in participating. The push to enhance research and technological collaboration with universities has been a priority at NASA for years and has seen success at other NASA centers across the country.

While KSC becomes the first NASA center affiliated with a university consortium, recently NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Ames Research Center in California 鶹Ʒ Ss Silicon Valley partnered with University of California, Berkeley, on development of the Berkeley Space Center at NASA Research Park, located at Ames. Still in development, the project is envisioned as a 36-acre discovery and innovation hub to include educational spaces, labs, offices, student housing, and a new conference center. More recently, NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Johnson Space Center in Houston teamed up with Texas A&M University to break ground on a building that will become a testing laboratory for apparatuses in development for NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss moon to Mars plans. In attendance for the groundbreaking was KSC Director Janet Petro, who was one of the signatories on the agreement.

鶹Ʒ SThis agreement is a shining example of what it looks like when we link arms and create a space for the whole to be greater than all our parts, 鶹Ʒ S Petro says. 鶹Ʒ SThis symbiotic partnership makes way for collaborative research opportunities and increased exposure to advanced technology, significantly enhancing NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss research output in fields such as aerospace engineering, materials science, robotics and environmental science, all of which are necessary for long-term human exploration as we learn to live and work deeper into space than ever before. 鶹Ʒ S

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UCF Teacher Education Alumna Inspires Future Generations Through NASA Outreach /news/ucf-teacher-education-alumna-inspires-future-generations-through-nasa-outreach/ Mon, 06 Jan 2025 14:00:34 +0000 /news/?p=144501 Cat Toon 鶹Ʒ S13 encourages everyone to follow their passion and know they can explore opportunities in space and aeronautics from outside a traditional STEM field.

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Bridging the gap between the classroom and the cosmos might not be a traditional career path for teacher education alumni, but it 鶹Ʒ Ss exactly what Margaret Catherine 鶹Ʒ SCat 鶹Ʒ S Toon 鶹Ʒ S13 is doing through her role at NASA.

Toon, a School of Teacher Education alumna who works for NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Exploration Ground Systems (EGS) at Kennedy Space Center, is using her teaching experience to inspire students and teachers to shoot for the stars. The EGS program is helping lay the foundation for humanity 鶹Ʒ Ss return to the moon. EGS develops and operates the ground systems and facilities needed to process and launch rockets and spacecraft for NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Artemis missions. Those involved in the project also play a primary role in assembly, launch, and recovery of rockets and spacecraft.

A large part of Toon 鶹Ʒ Ss role within EGS is to support outreach and engagement with local schools and communities. She 鶹Ʒ Ss been able to utilize her teaching degree and experience to help educate teachers and students on what EGS is doing, how they as the Artemis Generation can become involved, and what different career paths are available at NASA.

Toon 鶹Ʒ Ss journey began at age 4 with a love for teaching and space exploration.

鶹Ʒ SI remember being in daycare, trying to read a book about stars, and thinking it would be so cool to see space, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SI didn 鶹Ʒ St think I wanted to be an astronaut, but I realized teachers could also go to space, and I loved my teachers. I decided I was going to be a teacher 鶹Ʒ S maybe I’ll go into space one day, maybe not, but that’s what vividly shaped my path into going and pursuing a degree in education. 鶹Ʒ S

Cat Toon
Margaret Catherine 鶹Ʒ SCat 鶹Ʒ S Toon 鶹Ʒ S13

While Toon initially pursued elementary education, her passion for learning and teaching evolved into a role at NASA. She now uses her skills to communicate the complexities of space exploration and engage with the students. She focuses on outreach and helping students understand the wide range of opportunities at NASA.

鶹Ʒ SWhen I visit schools, I ask students to raise their hand if they love math, and then if they hate it, I tell them NASA isn 鶹Ʒ St just for engineers or astronauts, 鶹Ʒ S Toon says. 鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss for anyone with a passion, whether it 鶹Ʒ Ss art or reading or writing. Everyone has a role in exploration. 鶹Ʒ S

Her teaching background has also equipped her with different skills that have been useful in her current role.

鶹Ʒ SLesson planning and curriculum development taught me to plan with the end in mind, 鶹Ʒ S Toon says. 鶹Ʒ SThat has helped me when creating measurable milestones and problem-solving. 鶹Ʒ S

She also has fun engaging with the students with whom she interacts as she teaches them new things about space.

鶹Ʒ SExplaining to students how astronauts go potty in space 鶹Ʒ S that’s always a super fun activity, 鶹Ʒ S she says.

Toon highlighted several resources available for educators and students interested in space exploration. These include NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss STEM Engagement portal, interactive games and internships. Programs like Next Gen STEM provide practical tools and lesson plans for classroom use, while internship opportunities at NASA offer hands-on experience for aspiring professionals.

While Toon no longer dreams of going to space herself, her work continues to leave an undeniable mark.

鶹Ʒ SThe Artemis missions are about creating a long-term impact, not just for the U.S., but for all of humanity, 鶹Ʒ S she says.   鶹Ʒ SI get to help tell our story and help leave that legacy. 鶹Ʒ S

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Cat Toon
Robot Rovers on the “Moon”: Lunabotics Challenge Preps Students for Space Careers /news/robot-rovers-on-the-moon-lunabotics-challenge-preps-students-for-space-careers/ Thu, 09 May 2024 15:10:59 +0000 /news/?p=141440 College teams, including a group of Knights, will build robot rovers and compete at the new Regolith Bin at UCF’s Exolith Lab before the best crews advance to finals at Kennedy Space Center.

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More than 40 college teams from across the U.S. designing and building autonomous vehicles will soon find out if they are capable of navigating and conducting missions on a simulated lunar surface resembling the moon.

The robot rovers won 鶹Ʒ St be going into space 鶹Ʒ S but they will face the next best challenge: to build a berm structure which would be useful to NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Artemis program for navigating during lunar landings and launches, shading cryogenic propellant tank farms, providing radiation protection around a nuclear power plant and other mission-critical uses.

NASA created the Lunabotics Challenge in support of the Artemis program. UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss Florida Space Institute and its Exolith Lab will host the first round, sponsored by Caterpillar Inc., on May 11-14. The top 10 teams will advance to the demonstrations phase of the competition at the Kennedy Space Center May 15-17.

At UCF, students will be testing and showcasing their rovers in the same regolith bin that NASA, the European Space Agency and many companies use to evaluate and improve new equipment and technologies before launching them into space. Leaders in key industries that are important to Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss and the region 鶹Ʒ Ss workforce will serve as judges.

鶹Ʒ SLunabotics gives students from throughout the United States an unrivaled opportunity to apply their knowledge of robotics and space to NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss design and construction processes, 鶹Ʒ S says Winston Schoenfeld, UCF interim vice president for research. 鶹Ʒ SThe future of our space and many other high-tech industries depends on preparing a talented workforce that can innovate and work in highly collaborative team environments. 鶹Ʒ S

Each team of college students has spent months designing and building a robot rover to NASA specifications that, during this challenge, will autonomously navigate a lunar-simulated arena and excavate regolith. They will compete two teams at a time per round, being given a set amount of time to collect regolith from the construction zone and dump it into a berm zone. Teams will be judged on a variety of factors, chiefly, the size of the berm they are able to build up in the regolith material with the rover.

The top 10 teams then travel to Kennedy Space Center for the culminating event, to demonstrate the operation of their functional tele-operated or autonomous robot to complete the lunar construction tasks. Students benefit from participating and having their work evaluated by NASA and private sector engineers, technicians and educators. NASA benefits by assessing student designs and data the same way it does for its own designs, encouraging innovation in student designs and identifying clever solutions to the many challenges inherent in future Artemis missions.

鶹Ʒ SNASA 鶹Ʒ Ss Artemis program is our plan to return humanity to the surface of the moon in a way that is sustainable over the long term.  And the task of robotically building berm structures will be important for preparation and support of crewed lunar missions.  These competing teams are not only building critical engineering skills that will assist their future careers, but they are literally helping NASA prepare for our future Artemis missions, 鶹Ʒ S says NASA Software Developer & In-Situ Resource Specialization (ISRU) Researcher Kurt Leucht.

Founded to help fuel talent for the nearby space industry, UCF continues to build its reputation as SpaceU. NASA, with more than 50 years of research support from UCF, has advanced its Artemis program with the goal of establishing a sustainable human presence on the moon and preparing for missions to Mars. Prominent UCF space researchers are actively engaged in multiple collaborations with NASA 鶹Ʒ S particularly within the Artemis program 鶹Ʒ S and 29% of Kennedy Space Center employees are UCF alums.

鶹Ʒ SStudents are taking on a challenge that also faces all of our top space agencies and companies 鶹Ʒ S how can we design and build an autonomous vehicle that can reliably perform tasks on the surface of the moon? 鶹Ʒ S says Julie Brisset, interim director of UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss Florida Space Institute. 鶹Ʒ SThe hands-on experience is invaluable for students and will help set them up for success on their campuses and in their future careers. 鶹Ʒ S

Soil simulants used in the Lunabotics Challenge at UCF are created from crushed minerals. Once produced by UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss Exolith Lab, this regolith is now manufactured by a successful spinoff company, Space Resource Technologies. Other sponsors include Allen & Company, Lunar Outpost, Riegl USA and Venturi Astrolab.

UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss Lunabotics Challenge 2024 Team members include Cielo Torres, Zachary Weisiger, Gavin Fitzgerald, Jacob LIorca, Thomas Jaycard and Lee Marshall, who serves as captain. Not pictured: Samantha Simmons, Alfredo Nazario, Connor Smith, Caden Brock. (Photo by Antoine Hart)

As for the UCF Team, comprised of nine mechanical engineering and computer science students, learning how to work together as a team was as worthwhile an output as the lunar robot itself.

鶹Ʒ SOur 鶹Ʒ Smove fast and break things 鶹Ʒ S mindset has led to lots of creativity flowing to solve problems that came up with the design, 鶹Ʒ S says Lee Marshall, who serves as team lead for UCF.

Their biggest challenge was creating a custom mechanical solution from scratch for the controls, according to Marshall. For the robot rover, materials came from 3D printers, an Xbox Connect being used as a camera and depth sensor, and other materials found in the Robotics Club lab.

鶹Ʒ SFrom observing the team, you can see their dedication, innate drive and determination to make it through the qualifying event, 鶹Ʒ S says Crystal Maraj, faculty advisor for the UCF Robotics Club and an assistant professor with the Institute for Simulation and Training. 鶹Ʒ SIt takes a lot of time and effort, and I applaud these students for their success to iterate the design and utility of the robot for competition. 鶹Ʒ S

Members of the public will be able to watch the competition rounds of the Lunabotics Challenge on the Florida Space Institute 鶹Ʒ Ss YouTube Channel. The Lunabotics .

 

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Robot Rovers on the "Moon": Lunabotics Challenge Preps Students for Space Careers | University of Central Florida News College teams, including a group of Knights, will build robot rovers and compete at the new Regolith Bin at UCF's Exolith Lab before the best crews advance to finals at Kennedy Space Center. Artemis,Crystal Maraj,Dan Britt,engineering vert space,Exolith Lab,Florida Space institute,Institute for Simulation and Training,Julie Brisset,Research,space,Space Resource Technologies,Winston Schoenfeld UCF Lunabotics Team 2025 UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss Lunabotics Challenge 2024 Team members include Cielo Torres, Zachary Weisiger, Gavin Fitzgerald, Jacob LIorca, Thomas Jaycard and Lee Marshall, who serves as captain. Not pictured: Samantha Simmons, Alfredo Nazario, Connor Smith, Caden Brock. (Photo by Antoine Hart)
NASA Administrator Bill Nelson: UCF 鶹Ʒ SIs America 鶹Ʒ Ss Space University 鶹Ʒ S /news/nasa-administrator-bill-nelson-to-ucf-graduates-theres-no-moonshot-beyond-your-reach/ Mon, 06 May 2024 15:34:49 +0000 /news/?p=141372 Nelson told UCF graduates that 鶹Ʒ Sthere 鶹Ʒ Ss no moonshot beyond your reach. 鶹Ʒ S

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NASA Administrator Bill Nelson encouraged UCF graduates Saturday afternoon to reach for their 鶹Ʒ Smoonshot. 鶹Ʒ S

鶹Ʒ SKnights, it 鶹Ʒ Ss no wonder that since the beginning, NASA has relied on UCF to help in our moonshots, 鶹Ʒ S Nelson told engineering, computer science and optics graduates during his commencement address. 鶹Ʒ SAnd Knights, it 鶹Ʒ Ss no wonder that it 鶹Ʒ Ss going to be a member of your generation who leaves their footprints on the red sands of Mars. So, to the Class of 鶹Ʒ S24: you have moonshots in your DNA.

鶹Ʒ SMoonshots are big things. They 鶹Ʒ Sre bigger than any one of us. They 鶹Ʒ Sre bigger than all of us. Like Pegasus, you now have to reach for the skies 鶹Ʒ S and now you can carry thunder and lightning with you.

鶹Ʒ SAnd you know how to aim for the moon 鶹Ʒ Sbecause this is America 鶹Ʒ Ss Space University. There 鶹Ʒ Ss no moonshot beyond your reach. So, decide what your moonshot will be 鶹Ʒ S and then your launch, your liftoff, will happen right when you walk out those doors. 鶹Ʒ S

UCF President Alexander N. Cartwright told Nelson, 鶹Ʒ SYou 鶹Ʒ Sre absolutely right. Our students are incredible, and they can all achieve any moonshot they set their minds to. 鶹Ʒ S

UCF was founded in 1963 鶹Ʒ S and offered its first classes in 1968 鶹Ʒ S to help fuel talent to support the nearby space industry, and the university has partnered with NASA ever since, with UCF faculty and students working on about 700 NASA projects.

Many UCF space researchers and alumni are involved in the Artemis program. Planetary scientists Kerri Donaldson Hanna and Addie Dove are leading a $35 million NASA mission to land a robotic spacecraft on the moon in 2027 to explore never-before-visited volcanic domes and help inform future exploration. UCF researchers also are studying rocket propulsion, protecting astronauts and their equipment from harmful space dust, and the health impacts of space travel on astronauts.

Twenty-nine percent of Kennedy Space Center employees are UCF alumni. And UCF repeatedly ranks as the No. 1 provider of graduates to the aerospace and defense industry, according to Aviation Week Network.

鶹Ʒ SIn 1968, as Apollo 7 propelled Americans into space 鶹Ʒ S and later, through Apollo 11, to land on the Moon 鶹Ʒ S UCF began to educate and inspire a new generation of leaders: the Apollo generation, 鶹Ʒ S Nelson said. 鶹Ʒ SAnd I ask you today to give your imagination to help us achieve another dream 鶹Ʒ S now to return humanity to the moon and then to look onward to Mars and beyond. 鶹Ʒ S

Nelson has served as NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss 14th administrator for three years. A fifth-generation Floridian, he previously represented the state as a U.S. senator for 18 years and a congressman for 12 years. UCF awarded Nelson the Exemplary Public Service Lifetime Achievement Award in 2016, recognizing his longtime service in government.

鶹Ʒ SI have the honor of serving a storied organization that makes history 鶹Ʒ S that makes the impossible possible, 鶹Ʒ S Nelson told graduates, citing the James Webb Space Telescope a million miles away, always on the opposite side of the Earth from the sun. 鶹Ʒ SAt NASA, we know a thing or two about moonshots. Because we’re going back (to the moon) after a half-century. This time, we 鶹Ʒ Sre going to learn to live, to experiment on the lunar surface 鶹Ʒ S to invent, to create in order for us not just to go the moon, but to go further 鶹Ʒ S to go to Mars and beyond.

鶹Ʒ SWe’re expanding upon the vision of President John Kennedy that he laid forth in 1961 鶹Ʒ S He challenged our country to unite behind a bold endeavor, once thought impossible. He made America believe in moonshots. And today, moonshots are not confined to the cosmos. Moonshots are imagined, developed and achieved here on Earth 鶹Ʒ S by people like you. 鶹Ʒ S

In 1986, Nelson trained and flew with the crew of the Space Shuttle Columbia for mission STS-61C, the 24th flight of the Space Shuttle. While orbiting Earth 98 times over six days, Nelson conducted 12 medical experiments, including the first American stress test in space on a treadmill and a cancer research experiment sponsored by university researchers.

鶹Ʒ SKennedy didn 鶹Ʒ St have all the answers when he dared America to go to the moon, but he had the courage to dream, 鶹Ʒ S Nelson said. 鶹Ʒ SSo, graduates, you don 鶹Ʒ St need all the answers on this special day. What you need today is to have the confidence and trust to decide what is your moonshot. Confidence that you will do what is hard and trust that what you can achieve is great. Confidence and trust that you will be a part of something larger than any one person. So, what’s your moonshot? 鶹Ʒ S

UCF awarded about 9,800 degrees this weekend, including nearly 3,000 in STEM fields and about 1,400 in engineering and computer science.

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The Next Giant Leaps for All of Humankind /news/the-next-giant-leaps-for-all-of-humankind/ Wed, 29 Nov 2023 14:35:55 +0000 /news/?p=138202 Only 12 people have ever stepped foot on the moon. Kelvin Manning 鶹Ʒ S02MS is among NASA 鶹Ʒ Ss leaders who believe the next lunar visits will be even more meaningful to more people.

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Kelvin Manning 鶹Ʒ S02MS 鶹Ʒ Ss office is nestled among one of the most peaceful settings imaginable: in a wildlife refuge near miles and miles of beach. His job as deputy director at Kennedy Space Center (KSC) belies the surroundings. Exciting, yes. Peaceful, not exactly. It fits the man himself, because behind Manning 鶹Ʒ Ss undisturbed smile and easy laughter is a mind that never stops.

鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm always trying to keep up, always trying to think a few steps ahead, 鶹Ʒ S he says.

Manning 鶹Ʒ Ss idea of forward thinking is quite different than it is for most of us. He 鶹Ʒ Ss among the leaders at NASA helping to guide us back to the moon and eventually to Mars via the Artemis missions. That should be plenty for Manning to think about, but there 鶹Ʒ Ss more. He 鶹Ʒ Ss also planning the launch of the PACE (Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, Ocean Ecosystem) mission in January 2024 and for the next group of Commercial Crew astronauts to travel to the International Space Station in February 2024.

It’s enough to make most heads spin. Manning, however, is a picture of happiness and humility, even when he says, 鶹Ʒ SWhen you 鶹Ʒ Sve been immersed in the space program for more than 30 years, I don 鶹Ʒ St think you ever totally escape from it. 鶹Ʒ S

He doesn 鶹Ʒ St necessarily want to escape from it. At night, he can go outside, look at the moon, and think, 鶹Ʒ SWe 鶹Ʒ Sre coming. 鶹Ʒ S He sees the stars and planets farther out. 鶹Ʒ SYou 鶹Ʒ Sre next. 鶹Ʒ S The closest he comes to bringing his thoughts back down to earth is during the hour-long commutes from his home in Oviedo, Florida, to KSC, and back. But even on those drives his thoughts eventually drift back into space.

鶹Ʒ SSome of my best ideas come to me while I 鶹Ʒ Sm driving, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says. 鶹Ʒ SI carry yellow stickie pads in my car so I can write them down 鶹Ʒ S safely 鶹Ʒ S always safely. 鶹Ʒ S

One way to get Manning to tap the mental brakes is to ask a simple question: Why are you so excited about sending people to the moon more than 50 years after America 鶹Ʒ Ss first lunar walk? Manning pauses, not because he has to come up with an answer, but because this is the question that drives him. And he wants his answer to clearly communicate what stimulates his mind every single day.

鶹Ʒ SWhen we think of going back to the moon and then to Mars, to have that Star Trek experience, where will it all start? Where do people leave our planet? It starts right here, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says from his office within proximity of the ocean, wild deer, and Launch Complex 39A, where the Space Launch System (SLS) is currently scheduled to send four astronauts on Artemis 2 to fly around the moon late next year. 鶹Ʒ SIn the history of humankind, only 12 people have walked on the moon and they all launched from here. If you combine the time they spent outside their spacecraft on the moon 鶹Ʒ Ss surface, it comes to just over three days. That 鶹Ʒ Ss like spending a long weekend in a rural area of Florida and thinking you 鶹Ʒ Sve seen the entire world. There 鶹Ʒ Ss a lot more to explore and discover. To be part of it 鶹Ʒ S wow. How cool is that? 鶹Ʒ S

A kid named Kelvin Manning was living in Gary, Indiana, when Neil Armstrong became the first man to step onto the moon on July 20, 1969.

鶹Ʒ SPeople talk of that pivotal moment, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says, 鶹Ʒ Sbut it was late at night for me. I 鶹Ʒ Sm pretty sure my mother had sent me to bed. 鶹Ʒ S

At the time, Manning 鶹Ʒ Ss father was serving the U.S. Army in Vietnam. The family didn 鶹Ʒ St have any exposure to an organization called NASA. They didn 鶹Ʒ St have any connections with astronauts or aerospace engineers. Dinner conversations rarely touched on the space program because it seemed to be happening in an unattainable realm.

Manning 鶹Ʒ Ss first real glimpse of human possibilities beyond Earth didn 鶹Ʒ St come until he received an appointment to the U.S. Air Force Academy. After graduation, he spent six years as an officer working as a space operations analyst. His experience led to jobs at GE Aerospace and McDonnell Douglas, where his awe for 鶹Ʒ Sthe NASA meatball 鶹Ʒ S grew. After he landed a job at KSC in 1992 to work on the space shuttle program, he would be positioned to be among the first to hear about a new Constellation program that would become known as Artemis.

鶹Ʒ SThat 鶹Ʒ Ss when I realized we were going back to the moon, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says, 鶹Ʒ Sand I was going to be a part of it. 鶹Ʒ S

To be a strong leader in our next journey into space, however, Manning knew he needed to go back to school. 鶹Ʒ SA lot had transpired since I 鶹Ʒ Sd graduated from the Academy 20 years earlier. My peers at KSC would sometimes use unfamiliar terms and acronyms, so I had to up my game. 鶹Ʒ S

He didn 鶹Ʒ St have to go back to school, though, because the school came to him. Professors from UCF were driving to KSC to teach a master 鶹Ʒ Ss program in engineering management.

鶹Ʒ SThe presence of [UCF 鶹Ʒ Ss] instructors fed right into the NASA culture, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says, 鶹Ʒ Swhich is to stay curious, continuously learn, keep innovating, always move forward. Without the master 鶹Ʒ Ss from UCF, I 鶹Ʒ Sd have less understanding about leadership and less knowledge from a technical standpoint. 鶹Ʒ S

To this day, he uses one of the acronyms he learned to help improve processes: PDSA, which stands for Plan-Do-Study-Act. Manning doesn 鶹Ʒ St always need to explain what it means because so many of his peers completed the same UCF master 鶹Ʒ Ss program. Nearly 30% of KSC 鶹Ʒ Ss employees have degrees from UCF.

鶹Ʒ SWe speak the same language, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says, 鶹Ʒ Slike 鶹Ʒ SGo Knights. Charge on. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S

That kind of optimism overshadows any pressure Manning might feel. Yes, there 鶹Ʒ Ss a lot at stake for the deputy director, but his perspective guides his demeanor.

鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm blessed to work for the best government agency, 鶹Ʒ S he says, referring to a Federal Employee Viewpoint Survey that 鶹Ʒ Ss ranked NASA the best large agency in the federal government for 11 consecutive years. Manning 鶹Ʒ Ss perspective, however, stretches much wider than knowing he has a good job at a nice place.

鶹Ʒ SAs a kid looking at anything related to space on TV, I didn 鶹Ʒ St see anyone who looked like me. Now, everyone can look and be inspired. For the Artemis 2 mission we 鶹Ʒ Sre sending Victor Glover, an African American astronaut, to the moon. We 鶹Ʒ Sre sending Christina Koch, the first woman, to the moon. We 鶹Ʒ Sre sending Reid Wiseman and Jeremy Hansen, the first Canadian, to the moon. I 鶹Ʒ Sve served on the past three astronaut selection panels and remember Victor and Christina from the class of 2013. To see how far they 鶹Ʒ Sve come and to realize how far they 鶹Ʒ Sre about to go, how powerful is that? I feel like I 鶹Ʒ Sm with them all the way. 鶹Ʒ S

When the official countdowns begin for the Artemis missions, Manning will stop thinking of his next steps and appreciate what is right in front of his eyes. He plans to watch history from the operations support building terrace across from the launch pad, a spot this kid never dreamed of from his bedroom in Gary, Indiana.

鶹Ʒ SThis time, 鶹Ʒ S Manning says, 鶹Ʒ SI want to be where I can see it, feel it, and know I 鶹Ʒ Sm part of our space story. 鶹Ʒ S

 

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