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CRD Participates in Celebration of Fifty Years of Space Exploration

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  • CRD Participates in Celebration of Fifty Years of Space Exploration

    November 12, 2007
    For immediate release
    Anahid Yeremian
    P.O. Box 655, Menlo Park, CA 94026
    <mailto:[email protected]>anahi [email protected]
    650 - 926 - 4444

    FIFTY YEARS OF SPACE EXPLORATION

    As the world celebrates the fiftieth anniversary of space exploration,
    representatives from around the globe gathered in Moscow and Washington
    D.C. to reminisce about the events that led to the first missions
    to space, to review space achievements since that time, and to offer
    plans for future space exploration. Most delegates represented large
    and powerful countries, such as the United States, Russia, Canada,
    and Germany. It seems unbelievable that Armenia, a tiny country with
    limited resources, would come shoulder to shoulder with these giants,
    but, indeed, this was the case.

    The first year of space exploration, 1957, was designated as the
    International Geophysical Year (IGY-57). The year's mission was
    to begin a fifty-year period of space exploration so that we might
    understand our own planet more thoroughly. The IGY-57 goals in space
    exploration have led to vital accelerated technological advancements,
    such as satellites (communication, weather, and research). Knowledge
    gained about the environment beyond the earth's atmosphere has led
    to putting a man on the moon and to building a space research station
    that has been staffed continuously.

    The year 2007 marks the launch of the International Heliophysical Year
    (IHY-07). This year's aim is to begin a fifty-year period of exploring
    the environment in the sun's "neighborhood." The Cosmic Ray Division
    of the Alikhanyan Physics Institute in Armenia has a very important
    project associated with IHY-07, the Space Environmental Viewing and
    Analysis Network (SEVAN). This project encompasses placing detectors
    designed and made in Armenia in ten different countries. The European
    office of the U.S. Air Force has already funded the SEVAN detector
    that will be placed in Croatia. China is paying for one in Tibet. The
    University of Costa Rica and the Jawaharlal Nehru University in New
    Delhi are writing proposals to their respective governments to fund
    the placement of several SEVAN detectors in their countries.

    Professor Ashot Chilingarian, head of the Cosmic Ray Division of
    the Alikhanyan Physics Institute and Armenia's representative to the
    Committee On Space Research (COSPAR), was an invited participant at
    the 50 Years of Space celebration forum in Moscow, which was organized
    by the Russian Academy of Sciences. He and the delegate from Ukraine
    were the only two scientists from the former Soviet republics, other
    than Russia, to be invited to deliver a speech. Other participants at
    the celebration included Professor R. Bohnne (president of COSPAR)
    and representatives from NASA, the European Space Agency, the Japan
    Space Agency, and many major universities involved in space-related
    explorations.

    In Washington D.C., Professor Chilingarian participated in the Making
    Science Global: Reconsidering the Social and Intellectual Implications
    of the International Polar and Geophysical Years conference organized
    by the Air and Space Museum of the Smithsonian Institute. He presented
    five subjects from the work in progress at the CRD that are vital
    to the IHY-07 goals. The SEVAN network was once again highlighted as
    a major project of the IHY-07. While in Washington, D.C., Professor
    Chilingarian took advantage of the opportunity to meet with several
    NASA colleagues and made a presentation at the National Science
    Foundation to lay the ground for Armenia's possible partnership in
    several U.S. space exploratory projects.

    Professor Chilingarian also met with many in the Diaspora, serving as
    the keynote speaker for the Michigan chapter of the Armenian Engineers
    and Scientists of America (AESA) 10-th anniversary banquet on October
    26 and participating in a community forum at St. John Armenian Church
    in Detroit. On November 3, Professor Chilingarian was the keynote
    speaker at the AESA Greater Metropolitan Washingon Area Chapter's
    10-th anniversary luncheon at St. Mary Armenian Church in Washington
    D.C. The interest of those in the Diaspora was evident from the many,
    many questions addressed to Professor Chilingarian. Pleasure at the
    achievements of the CRD and at the recognition these achievements
    bring to Armenia was expressed repeatedly by many individuals at
    these events.

    Professor Chilingarian will be back in the U.S. in December to
    attend the American Geophysical Union's annual conference in San
    Francisco. While here, he will speak at a public reception for the Bay
    Area community on Sunday, December 9, from 2 - 4 p.m., at St. John
    Armenian Church, 275 Olympia Way, San Francisco, as well as in Los
    Angeles and Fresno (those dates and locations to be announced shortly)

    The Diaspora's support for the Cosmic Ray Division of the Alikhanian
    Physics Institute continues to play a vital role in the world-class
    achievements of the CRD. These include advancing space-related science
    IN Armenia, educating the next generation of outstanding scientists IN
    Armenia; creating opportunities for exciting employment in the field
    of space science IN Armenia, and promoting a positive image of Armenia
    to the world. For more information and to support the CRD in Armenia,
    please visit <http://www.crdfriends.org/>www.crdfriends.o rg .
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