The country of seven astronauts is shaping the future of Europe’s next generation launch vehicles and is actively taking part in ESA’s space exploration projects. In an interview with me, Italian Space Agency (ASI) President Roberto Battiston, talks his presidency and Italy’s contribution to spaceflight.
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| This is an artist's concept of Cassini spacecraft during the Saturn Orbit Insertion (SOI) maneuver, just after the main engine has begun firing. Credit: NASA/JPL |
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| Vega rocket carrying ESA's experimental spaceplane, IXV, lifts off from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, on 11 February 2015. Credit: ESA–S. Corvaja |
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He is also the founder of a research group in Perugia working in the field of frontier detectors and technologies to be used in fundamental physics research – ground based and space based. In 1994 he founded SERMS (Laboratory for the Study of the Effects of the Radiation on Special Materials), devoted to the characterization of materials and devices to be used in space conditions. He is also the Deputy spokesperson for the AMS experiment, the first fundamental physics experiment approved on the International Space Station, already successfully flown during the STS-91 Shuttle flight in June 1998 and installed on the ISS in 2011.


