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Thomas during event from Space Station
Science & Exploration

Live: Thomas Pesquet’s first press conference after Alpha mission landing

11/11/2021 2313 views 24 likes
ESA / Science & Exploration / Human and Robotic Exploration / Alpha

ESA astronaut Thomas Pesquet splashed down on Earth after 199 days in space on Monday 8 November. After being helped out of the Crew Dragon Endeavour, just four days later and after a boat, helicopter and multiple aircraft rides, Thomas arrived at the European Astronaut Centre in Cologne, Germany, and is giving his first press conference since his return to Earth.

Tune in at 09:15 GMT (10:15 CET) on 12 November to watch the news conference and find out more about Thomas.

Programme

  • Welcome by ESA’s Director of Human and Robotic Exploration Dave Parker.
  • Statement from ESA’s Director General Josef Aschbacher.
  • Presentation on ESA’s vision on the future of human and robotic space exploration.
  • Thomas Pesquet statement.
  • Questions and answers from press (will be also in French).

Thomas flew to the International Space Station as part of Crew-2 alongside NASA astronauts Shane Kimbrough and Megan McArthur and JAXA astronaut Akihiko Hoshide.

Thomas back in Cologne
Thomas back in Cologne

During Thomas’ second mission to space, called Alpha, he broke many ESA spaceflight records including most time spent spacewalking and most time in space for any European. He also became the first French commander of the International Space Station, taking over the role from Aki.

In addition to supporting 200 investigations in space, including 40 European ones and 12 new experiments led by the French space agency CNES, Thomas saw seven spacecraft come and go, the 20-year old Pirs module leaving for good and the arrival of the Russian Nauka laboratory module with a very special passenger, the European Robotic Arm.

Back on Earth, Thomas will continue working with European researchers on experiments including Acoustic Diagnostics that looks into the impact of the Space Station environment on astronaut hearing, the TIME experiment that looks at whether astronauts judge time differently in space, and two experiments known as Grip and Grasp that look into the physiology behind eye-hand coordination and the role of gravity in regulating grip force, among others.

Crew-2 after splashdown
Crew-2 after splashdown