The Out Astronaut Project selects Brian Murphy as winner of the 2021 Out Astronaut Contest.

Murphy will train for climate-related research in space while directing youth outreach activities.

BOULDER, Colo. – Brian Murphy, a gay, non-binary astronomy student, was selected today as the winner of the 2021 Out Astronaut Contest, a competition hosted by the Out Astronaut Project to increase the visible representation of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) identified persons in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields.

Out Astronaut is sponsored through the International Institute for Astronautical Sciences, a non-profit institute that provides professional education for students interested in STEM careers in space. Murphy will attend the Advanced PoSSUM Academy this September at Florida Tech in Melbourne, FL in preparation for advanced studies within the institute.

The intent of the program is to fly an openly-LGBTQ identifying person in space to conduct a scientific mission as a scientist-astronaut. Of the 561 individuals that have been selected as astronauts or cosmonauts, none have ever identified openly as a member of the LGBTQ community during their tenure as an active astronaut. Dr. Sally Ride was never out until her death in 2012. More recently, Astronaut Anne McClain’s lesbian identity was forced into the spotlight following a highly-publicized domestic dispute.

Out Astronaut contestants were required to develop both a novel experiment compatible with an existing IIAS research campaign and a social impact plan to increase visibility and representation while promoting opportunities for LGBTQ persons in STEM. Murphy’s experiment proposal involved a low-cost carbon dioxide profiler that could be deployed on an IIAS atmospheric balloon and serve as a technology demonstrator for an integrated global citizen-science campaign. Murphy also organized a plan to incorporate STEM into counseling services for LGBTQ-identified youth.

“Just three years ago, I was closeted and cut off from the world of LGBTQ outreach and activism.  Now, I have been selected as the 2021 Out Astronaut, and get to work with the inspiring Out Astronaut team, and their partners, to see a more visible and inclusive future become reality.” said Murphy, “I am so thankful for all of the support I have received, and I look forward to chasing the dreams of LGBTQ acceptance in STEM and human spaceflight for years to come.”

The LGBTQ community is notably under-represented in STEM professions; according to a recent poll conducted by ‘Pride in STEM’, more than 40 percent of LGBTQ people in STEM are not out and LGBTQ students are less likely to follow an academic career. As a result, there are fewer out LGBTQ STEM professionals serving as role models to LGBTQ youth. The ‘Out Astronaut Project’ highlights the contributions of LGBTQ members currently working in science and space and provides grants to promising LGBTQ students currently pursuing professions in space-related fields.

“Regrettably, many LGBTQ people interested in STEM fear that their identity would be seen as a liability” said Out Astronaut Project Executive Director Dr. Jason Reimuller, “The intent of the Out Astronaut Project is to foster diversity and inclusion in STEM fields by helping out members of the LGBTQ community serve as role models and demonstrate that there are no limits to a career in science.”

Murphy will join 2019 Out Astronaut Contest winner Shannon Gatta, a pansexual engineer at Blue Origin that had previously served with the US Army in Afghanistan.

Additional competitions are being planned for 2022. To learn more about the Out Astronaut Project or to apply to the next Out Astronaut contest, visit outastronaut.org.

ABOUT THE OUT ASTRONAUT PROJECT

The Out Astronaut Project serves to address the under-representation of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) people in science and space. We highlight the contributions of LGBTQ members currently working in science and space and provide grants to promising LGBTQ students currently pursuing professions in space-related fields. Its goal is to train and fly an out member of the LGBTQ community as a scientist-astronaut. This person would be an inspiration to the LGBTQ community while enabling cutting-edge research. To learn more about the Out Astronaut Project or to apply to the Out Astronaut Contest, visit outastronaut.org.

April 7, 2022
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