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Jessica Meir Who I Am and What I Do I guide these experiments through the necessary review cycles, develop procedures that the astronauts will use on-orbit, train crewmembers, and provide ground support in the Mission Control Center while the astronauts are performing the experiments on the shuttle or ISS. Education and Career Path I also spent one of my semesters as an undergraduate student in a study abroad program in Stockholm, Sweden. With my mother coming from Sweden, and my father from Israel, I was fortunate enough to travel quite a bit outside of the United States while I was growing up. This semester abroad, however, provided me with an excellent opportunity to actually live and study in a foreign country, as well as to explore my mother's home country. During my senior year at Brown, a few other students and I decided to submit a proposal for NASA's Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities program. This program gives undergraduates a chance to design an experiment, and if selected, fly their experiment on NASA's KC-135 aircraft. By flying in a parabolic flight pattern, 20-30 second periods of microgravity (weightlessness) are created within the aircraft. This allows for researchers to conduct experiments and operations in microgravity, without even being in space! Astronauts also use this aircraft for training. My Brown team's experiment was selected, and we had the opportunity to experience microgravity for the first time. I highly encourage students around the nation to take advantage of the numerous educational outreach programs and opportunities that NASA has to offer. There is a wealth of knowledge, experience and fun to be gained from these programs. After graduating from Brown University, I obtained a master of space studies degree from the International Space University in Strasbourg, France. This year long program offers a unique education, ranging across all disciplines, from law, to politics, life sciences, and engineering -- all from the space perspective. I spent the year learning about space from this interdisciplinary and international approach, with students from over 20 different countries, a genuinely remarkable experience in itself! I also had the opportunity to experience microgravity again that year, this time on CNES's (the French Space Agency) A-300 aircraft as an assistance researcher and subject in a study on echocardiography doppler. I plan on pursuing an advanced degree in the near future, so my education is far from over. In the past years I have been wrestling with a decision between obtaining an MD or a PhD, but am currently leaning toward pursuing a PhD in a field related to evolutionary biology and/or life in extreme environments (astrobiology). I am also fascinated by marine biology (which suits the NEEMO mission well!), and hope to coordinate a specific topic of study to combine these main interests. Growing Up After being interested in space since I was a small child, I was thrilled to attend Purdue University's space camp when I was thirteen. I was certain that this would be my first concrete step toward a future career in the space industry. Personal I still love to read, and have lately been focusing on the classics. My recent favorites include Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray, Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, and Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment. My love of travel has remained and I always look forward to planning my next trip to some exotic location. |
Mission
Date: September, 2002 Mission Summary Aquanaut Profiles Expedition Journals Mission Pictures ![]() |
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