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IIAS Announces World’s First Industry-Sponsored Researcher Contracted to Fly on Commercial Spacecraft

IIAS Bioastronautics Researcher Kellie Gerardi to Fly as Payload Specialist on Dedicated Research Spaceflight with Virgin Galactic

BOULDER, Colo. (June 3 2021):  The International Institute for Astronautical Sciences (IIAS) has announced a contract to fly IIAS researcher Kellie Gerardi to space on a dedicated research mission with Virgin Galactic. The contract marks the world’s first industry-sponsored, human-tended research spaceflight on a commercial vehicle, and IIAS researcher Kellie Gerardi is the first female payload specialist contracted to fly on a commercial spacecraft.

Since 2015, IIAS has established research and education programs that use a variety of space-analog environments. The research spaceflight will advance the scientific knowledge gained from a number of Kellie’s previous reduced gravity flight campaigns performed here on Earth, including with the National Research Council of Canada and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA).

The IIAS experiments to be flown in space include the Astroskin Bio-Monitor wearable sensors system, developed by Canadian company Carré Technologies Inc. (Hexoskin) with the support of the CSA, as well as a free-floating fluid configuration experiment. The IIAS and Virgin Galactic teams will collaborate closely with academic and government partners to carefully plan Kellie’s spaceflight activities to maximize the science and technology advancements gained from her research experiments.

IIAS Founder Dr. Jason Reimuller said, “We’re excited to leverage the unique benefits of Virgin Galactic’s Spaceflight System for human-tended research. This has been a long-time goal of our institute and IIAS is proud to be the first research institute to produce a commercial astronaut. Throughout her years working with our institute, Kellie has demonstrated the expertise needed to produce novel research in dynamic operational environments. We’re looking forward to enabling the next generation of scientist-astronauts to conduct their research in space. ”

Kellie Gerardi said, “I’m enormously proud of my work with IIAS and I’m grateful to Dr. Reimuller and the team for the continued investment in me. I’m also excited by the precedent we’re setting with this human-tended research flight. I’m honored to take this first step on behalf of our community, and I’m looking forward to supporting the many talented researchers who will certainly follow.”

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For Media Inquiries:

media@astronauticsinstitute.org

About IIAS

The International Institute for Astronautical Sciences (IIAS) is a citizen-science, research, and education institute specializing in operational space science, human factors, flight test engineering, aeronomy, and bioastronautics. With students from 46 different countries, IIAS offers professional certifications and sponsors educational outreach programs. IIAS science and research campaigns produce peer-reviewed scientific publications, deployable space technologies, and inspire the next generation of international space professionals. More at astronauticsinstitute.org

About Kellie Gerardi

Kellie Gerardi  is a bioastronautics researcher with IIAS who has flown multiple parabolic research campaigns to evaluate commercial spacesuits and conduct research in microgravity. Kellie’s work as a science communicator has attracted hundreds of thousands of fans on social media. She serves on the Defense Council for the Truman National Security Project and on the Board of Directors for The Explorers Club, whose esteemed flag she carried during a crew rotation at the Mars Desert Research Station.  Kellie also holds a leadership role in global Mission Operations at Palantir Technologies. She is the author of  Not Necessarily Rocket Science and the upcoming children’s picture book series LUNA MUNA. Kellie lives in Jupiter, Florida with her husband Steven and their daughter Delta V.

June 30, 2021
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