The program is expected to include a one-week workshop at a relevant centre leading or having a relevant position within a Small Sats project to which a selected institute sends a team of students in engineering, physics, computer science or related sciences for initial training.
After returning to their home institute, the students will carry out collaborative work with that centre linked to a satellite being developed within this collaboration, in a mentor-mentee relationship. This collaboration will include the establishment or expansion of a local laboratory at the students' institute.
An initial agreement with INSPIRE network centres will serve as a launching pad, but the Panel is open to other leading institutions interested in acting as mentors under this program and in finding useful long-term collaborations this way. All costs related to the students' stay at the initial workshop, including a grant for travel costs, will be covered by COSPAR. Full details on how to apply to set up or develop a local laboratory in the program can be found here.
COSPAR's Capacity Building Program
The new Small Sats initiative will complement the well-established program of COSPAR Capacity Building Workshops (CBW), launched in 2001, of which there are roughly three per year. The main objective of this program is to encourage the scientific use of the extensive freely available space data archives and associated analysis software by scientists in developing countries.
A typical two-week workshop aims to provide highly practical "hands-on" training in the use of one or more of these data archives, to enable participants to improve the quality of their research after they return to their home institutes.
The team of lecturers are encouraged to provide at least minimal technical advice to participants when they have returned home and perhaps also to set up collaborative research projects. In this way, the workshops also play an important role in fostering professional links and collaborations between participants and international scientists, and are enhanced by the COSPAR Fellowship Program.
So far more than 1,200 researchers and students from 70 countries have benefited from the COSPAR CBW. A list of past and future approved workshops can be found here.
The COSPAR President, Professor Pascale Ehrenfreund said: "I am pleased to welcome this initiative, as it fulfils several of COSPAR's founding principles of promoting scientific space research at an international level, open to all scientists; promoting diversity and gender equality in all of its activities; and encouraging meaningful roles for younger scientists, who are the real future of international space research."
The Executive Director of COSPAR, Dr Jean-Claude Worms, stated: "Enabling the next generation of space researchers to reap the benefits of the heavy investment and effort in the space sector is vital to continue supporting an ethical and sustainable exploration of space and celestial bodies. In particular, it is critical that countries accessing the space field can benefit from the assets and knowledge derived through more than six decades of space exploration.
COSPAR has been steadily supporting capacity building with this goal in mind during the past twenty years, bringing in experienced lecturers and scientists to many countries in Africa, Latin America and Asia, to train this next generation of scientists and engineers. As Small Satellites are becoming commonplace and easy to implement at the laboratory and university level, this makes them unique tools in supporting such training and capacity building activities."
Chair of COSPAR's Panel on Capacity Building, Dr Carlos Gabriel, said: "COSPAR will not miss the extraordinary multidisciplinary opportunity that the field of small satellites offers for capacity building. This programme involves students in small satellite design, construction, testing, operations and science exploitation and complements perfectly our efforts over the past two decades to strengthen the advancement of science in developing countries."
The Panel on Capacity Building is ably headed by Dr Carlos Gabriel, and supported by a team of eight Vice-Chairs from India, Italy, the Netherlands, South Africa, the UK and the USA. The Panel meets regularly during the year and also at capacity building-targeted sessions at COSPAR Scientific Assemblies and Symposia. It works with several of the COSPAR Scientific Commissions and other Panels to ensure that the scientific fields covered by COSPAR are complemented by relevant Capacity Building Workshops.
In addition, the Panel relies on a wide network of volunteer scientists working to support its activities and events, all of whom have extensive experience in their field and enthusiasm for developing capacity building in developing countries.
A short video presenting the work of the COSPAR Panel on Capacity Building can be seen on the COSPAR YouTube channel here.
Related Links
INSPIRE
International Science Council Committee on Space Research
Microsat News and Nanosat News at SpaceMart.com
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