Since beginning her Minerva
mission in April 2022, Samantha has served as lead of the United States Orbital
Segment (USOS), overseeing activities in the US, European, Japanese and
Canadian modules and components of the Station.
Upon taking her new role, she will
become the fifth European commander of the Space Station, following in the
footsteps of previous ESA astronauts Frank De Winne, Alexander Gerst, Luca
Parmitano and Thomas Pesquet. She will also become the first European female to
occupy the position.
“I am humbled by my appointment to the
position of commander,” says Samantha “and look forward to drawing on the
experience I’ve gained in space and on Earth to lead a very capable team in
orbit.”
ESA’s Director General Josef Aschbacher
shares Samantha’s outlook. “Samantha’s selection for commandership clearly
demonstrates the faith and value our international partners place in ESA
astronauts. Throughout her Minerva mission she has contributed greatly to the
scientific and operational successes of the Station, and I anticipate that it
will continue to thrive under her command.”
Samantha will officially become
commander following a traditional handover ceremony which centres around the
symbolic passing of a key from the previous commander. The ceremony itself will
take place on Wednesday 28 September 2022 at 15:35 CEST (14:35 BST), and will
be broadcast live from the International Space Station on ESA Web TV.
David Parker, ESA’s Director of Human
and Robotic Exploration, shared his view that “Samantha’s wealth of knowledge
and experience makes her an excellent candidate for this role. As the first
European woman to fulfil the position of commander, she once again pushes
forward boundaries for female representation in the space sector.”
The full title of this role is
International Space Station crew commander. Commanderships are awarded based on
joint decisions taken by NASA (United States), Roscosmos (Russia), JAXA
(Japan), ESA (Europe), and CSA (Canada). ESA is represented in this selection
process by Head of the European Astronaut Centre and ISS Programme Manager,
Frank De Winne.
“I’m pleased that scheduling has changed in such a way that Samantha is once again due to occupy to position of commander,” says Frank. “She retains our full endorsement to fulfil this important leadership role. There is no doubt that her leadership will ensure continued mission success.”
Source: ESA
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