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  • 2017
  • Bear in the air

Bear in the air

91¶¶Òõ scientists carried a cuddly colleague with them as they boarded an aircraft for zero-gravity flights.

11 December 2017

‘Captain Bright One’, the university’s teddy bear mascot, flew with researchers as the pilot took the plane on an upward trajectory and then reduced thrust and pushed the stick to achieve weightlessness.

The researchers used the European Space Agency (ESA) flights to test a ground-breaking system that has the potential to revolutionise the way heat can be managed – a crucial requirement for satellites and other space craft.

The research is being led by Professor Marco Marengo, Professor of Engineering in the university’s School of Computing, Engineering and Mathematics. He said: “Due to the complete absence of air and the violent extremes in temperature in space, satellites, for example, require a thermal radiation screen in order to limit both the excessive heat from the sun and release of heat to the cold of outer space.”

Captain Bright One and Zero-g test aircraft
Captain Bright One 91¶¶Òõ mascot

His team is developing a novel ‘’ system which dissipates heat using an evaporator and a condenser connected through a meandering capillary tube. They needed to test the system in weightless conditions to ensure it will operate successfully when it is used in outer space.

ESA has granted the team access to the International Space Station to test the system further and it likely will travel with British astronaut Tim Peake when he undertakes his second space mission sometime after 2020.

The news follows the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council granting the team £900,000 to develop the system further.

Photos of the Captain Bright One teddy were taken by research team member , leader for the university’s Aeronautical Engineering courses.

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Foreground left, Libby Jackson from the UK Space Agency; left, higher and on a leash, the flying bear; left, background, Dr Daniele Mangini, Research Fellow (checking the equipment); right background Nicolas Miche, Principal Lecturer; and right foreground Marco Bernagozzi, Research Officer.
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