Mar 1992
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1992esasp.331....9b&link_type=abstract
In ESA, Telescience for Space Experimentation in the Fields of Space Science, Life, Materials and Fluid Sciences and Earth and E
Other
1
Man Machine Systems, Manned Space Flight, Remote Control, Spaceborne Experiments, Telecommunication, Columbus Space Station, Interactive Control, Reduced Gravity, Remote Sensing, Systems Engineering
Scientific paper
The keynote speech on telescience is presented. The use of sensors such as telescopes, microscopes, magnetometers, and changes to their operating conditions after certain observations is seen as the relationship between the scientist and the scientific goal. The characteristics of transparency and interactivity within this relationship are underlined. The maximum use of telescience in manned spaceflight and particularly within the framework of Columbus is stressed. An outline of the following three conference sessions is given: the necessity for microgravity experiments to be even more interactive than for space science experiments; the possibility of envisaging the telescience technology enabling the scientist and his research objective to be closely connected, even if the one on the ground and the other in orbit are at opposite ends of a complex system, and if each action at either end should be examined for its possible effect on the system as a whole.
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