Aleksander Lidtke
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My blog

This blog is mainly intended to write about my research. So if that's the sort of information that you, dear reader, are after you've come to the right place. I may give way to my epoistolographic needs sometimes, however, so be prepared.

65th International Astronautical Congress

22/10/2014

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I took part in the 65th International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Toronto at the end of September.
I presented a poster (unfortunately I was given a poster presentation even though I'd applied for an oral one) that shows how one should consider collision risk when deciding about which Active Debris Removal (ADR) architecture to implement.
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If you're interested in my paper please have a read. I'd welcome any comments, remarks or questions that you may have about it.

I was lucky enough to attend the IAC as one of several students sponsored by the European Space Agency's Education Office. This was a great opportunity to network with ESA staff, including the Director General, and other students from across Europe and other agencies participating in the International Space Education Board (ISEB). It was a great experience and I'm thankful to those choosing me. I'd definitely recommend to try and attend future IACs under ESA funding.
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Amazing Toronto.
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Advanced Maui Optical and Space Surveillance Technologies Conference (AMOS)

9/9/2014

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I attended the AMOS conference on Maui, Hawaii, USA. AMOS' scope are primarily the technologies used to track objects in orbit, which obviously relates to Space Debris.

It was extremely interesting to attend the talks and learn many things I hadn't had any exposure to before. Besides I don't think I'd met that many people that do work relevant to mine ever before.
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I gave a talk that was bridging the gap between what the debris modelling community, which I am a part of now, does and what the Space Situational Awareness (SSA) people do. I also suggested that perhaps Active Debris Removal is not mandatory unlike what most people think. It was generally very well received, felt a lot better too, and I even got invited to another conference organised by the NASA Orbital Debris Office.

So, in general, all very good. Besides, just how great it is that the best, solely from the technical point of view, conference I could attend is on Maui?
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A scene from the breakfast at the beach.
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29th  AMSAT-UK International Space Colloquium

27/7/2014

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I gave a talk at a symposium organised AMSAT-UK - the UK part  of a world-wide organisation of radio enthusiasts that build and operate amateur satellites. The talk was about the programme that my colleague and I are spearheading at the University of Southampton that aims to build and fly a CubeSat, hopefully in the next few years.
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I felt I'd sparked a lot of interest with UoS3 (University of Southampton Small Satellite) that is a continuation of my final-year project, BLAST. Hopefully, with many more students that will be working on it next academic year and the increasing number of volunteers in the team we will have a lot more to report during next year's AMSAT-UK colloquium!

The colloquium itself was a fascinating event - it was great to see that building a satellite with a team of enthusiasts is perfectly achievable. And we were privileged (and absolutely astonished) to be able to see a live stream of telemetry from ISEE-3 that was being captured by AMSAT-DL team using the Bochum antenna! Simply mindblowing.
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3rd European Workshop of Space Debris Modelling and Remediation

18/6/2014

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I had the pleasure to participate in the bi-annual workshop organised by the Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES, the French national space agency) that took place in Paris. It was extremely interesting to get together with the world-leading researchers in the same field, some of whom I met for the very first time.

What made the entire experience even more exciting was the fact that I gave a 20-minute talk. I'd given a talk to similarly-sized audience (circa 150 people) once before, but this time most of the listeners knew more about the general subject more than myself. But I always enjoy being in the spotlight, so that was reasonably enjoyable even.

Even though this was my very-first conference talk I was reasonably content with the outcome. And got some very useful comments and feedback that I am sure will greatly help me in my research, which was one of the primary reasons why I wanted to give a talk so early-on in the doctorate.

If you're interested here's the presentation that I gave - it's generally about a proposed method to try and pro-actively deal with the space debris problem to try and save money while getting the most out of it.
cnesworkshopjune2014_aleksanderlidtke.pdf
File Size: 1743 kb
File Type: pdf
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    Author

    Until recently, I have been doing a doctorate at the University of Southampton. Thus, a lot of this blog is mainly about my research that I did there. If you want to find out more about myself instead, please have a read.

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