| Jak nas Ziemian słychać na stacji kosmiczej. Wideo z ISS o naszym hobby i kilka QSO. |
Oakwood High School, Morgan Hill, California, USA April 23, 2025—Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) has received schedule confirmation for an ARISS radio contact between an astronaut aboard the International Space Station (ISS) and students at the Oakwood High School located in Morgan Hill, California. ARISS conducts 60-100 of these special amateur radio contacts each year between students around the globe and crew members with ham radio licenses aboard the ISS. Oakwood School is an independent school in Morgan Hill, California (South San Francisco Bay Area), serving 660 students in preschool through high school. In 2024, Oakwood’s student-built CubeSat, NyanSat, was selected to be launched into space as part of NASA’s CubeSat Launch Initiative. Oakwood was the only high school team to be selected alongside top-tier universities and a NASA space flight center. NyanSat is designed and built by students in their high school Spacecraft Systems Engineering program and develops groundbreaking technology, including payloads to determine the orbits of other CubeSats more precisely and for acoustic spacecraft mapping. This will be a direct contact via Amateur Radio allowing students to ask their questions of astronaut Jonathan (Jonny) Kim, amateur radio call sign KJ5HKP. The downlink frequency for this contact is 145.800 MHz and may be heard by listeners that are within the ISS-footprint that also encompasses the relay ground station. The amateur radio ground station for this contact is in Morgan Hill, CA. Amateur radio operators using call sign KK6OAK, will operate the ground station to establish and maintain the ISS connection. The ARISS radio contact is scheduled for April 25, 2025 at 10:27 am PDT (Morgan Hill, CA) (17:27:21 UTC, 1:27 pm EDT, 12:27 pm CDT and 11:27 am MDT). The public is invited to watch the live stream at: www.visitoakwood.com/space and also at https://live.ariss/org . _______________________________ As time allows, students will ask these questions: 1. How do you maintain your mental health during these long missions? 2. Where is your favorite place in the International Space Station? 3. What is an interesting piece of equipment on the ISS that we probably don't know about? 4. Did you ever doubt whether you could become an astronaut? 5. What is the first thing you will do when you get back on the ground? 6. When did you first feel like a real astronaut? 7. After returning to Earth, what do you think you will miss the most about being in space? 8. Has being in space changed how you feel about Earth and how small we are as humans? 9. What controls and buttons are really important on the ISS? 10. How do you maintain a consistent sleep schedule with more than one sunrise each day? 11. If you could give a message to your high school self, what would it be? 12. Is space scary? 13. What do you specialize in and how did this help you to become an astronaut? 14. What experiments are you assisting with on the ISS? 15. Why does the ISS have over 50 computers? 16. When did your passion start for space? 17. Did you bring anything to the ISS and if so, what did you bring? 18. What do you do if there is a medical emergency? 19. When you look down on Earth, what do you feel? 20. What is the hardest thing to do in zero gravity that you can do on Earth without thinking? |