Calling all SpaceUps, we want you for International Astronautical Congress (IAC) 2013 in Beijing!

After all these great SpaceUp events everywhere in the world bringing together so many diverse people discussing about the space topics they like, the initiator of SpaceUp and the local event organizers for SpaceUp Stuttgart and SpaceUp India thought it would be a great idea to evaluate what we achieved with SpaceUps. In this way every future SpaceUp can benefit by our finding. So we need all of you SpaceUp local event organizers and participants for this collaborative evaluation.

And the best part of this is it, that we will present the final result at the International Astronautical Congress (IAC) 2013 in Beijing. The IAC is an annual congress organized by the International Astronautical Federation together with the International Academy of Astronautics and the International Institute of Space Law (IISL). Diverse space discipline are presented and discussed in plenary sessions, lectures and meetings. The IAC is attended by the agency heads and senior executives of the world’s space agencies. And this year’s IAC will be held from 23 – 27 September in Beijing, China under the theme of “Promoting Space Development for the Benefit of Mankind“.  We think SpaceUp has a part in promoting space, so we should be there.

On behalf of all SpaceUps we submitted the abstract “SpaceUp unconferences: a 21st century global approach to space outreach” for the ”Space Culture: Innovative Approaches for Public Engagement in Space” session (2013-09-27 09:45) and it was accepted for a presentation and paper.

So we all can show what makes SpaceUp special, it’s participation. And we also would like to integrate the participatory approach for this “Year Book” what will become the paper for IAC 2013. So all of you will be co-authors and all of your SpaceUps will have a part in it. We will bring SpaceUp to those, who still haven’t heard of it, but are experts in their space sector. So it’s the very essence of SpaceUp connecting experts and the public in an innovative approach.

The content of the year book is not fixed. We just want you organizers to tell us what you experienced during your SpaceUp, what made it special, what didn’t work or what was an unexpected success. And we also want to hear from participants what you like or didn’t like about unconferences like this or what you would do in another way. Perhaps it changed the way you think about space and you want to share your experience. What do you think? Just tell us! We will help you writing and collecting everything.

We will start the collaborative working in here and you are kindly invited to participate any time. You can tweet or email us for questions or commitments, but we’re not the heads of this “Space Up Year Book 2010-13” it’s YOU! So let’s see where we head. Be creative, be curious, be part of the paper! There is space for everybody!

And who knows, perhaps we will all meet-up in Beijing and have a SpaceUp at IAC 2013 like there was for SpaceUp at ISDC 2013 (will be held at the International Space Development Conference in San Diego)?

Read the starting point for the SpaceUp Year Book, read the abstract for IAC here (IAC-13,E1,8,7,x17081.brief)!

Your fellow SpaceUp organizers!

PS: If you attended SpaceUp Paris and have seen this @60SecondsToLand video, you now know why the IAC 2013 was mentioned.

SpaceUp Paris calling for “60 seconds to land” videos

The first SpaceUp to be held in Paris, France, will  be hosted at the European Space Agency (ESA) headquarters, on May 25th-26th 2013. The event will even include a kickoff on the 24th, hosted by the French Space Agency (CNES) and based around the upcoming launcher Ariane 6!

Today SpaceUp Paris is announcing its call for “60 seconds to land” videos.

We would like to invite you to send in a “60 seconds to land” video that we will play during SpaceUp Paris.
You can present anything you like from “why SpaceUp $cityname is awesome” or just send in a “bonjour” or present a topic that could lead into a discussion round. You are completely free to fill 60 seconds as you like. It doesn’t have to be professional, so webcam captures are okay for us, as long as they show your enthusiasm and can inspire participants!

The first “60 seconds to land” videos to be displayed were at SpaceUp Stuttgart, Germany, in October 2012, and we simply love the concept – it gives the opportunity to those who can not attend to still make a contribution to the event.

Just send your video in until May 19th so that we will find them. You can twitter the link to @SpaceUpParis, or send the link through our contact page.

 

More information about SpaceUp Paris and online registration are located at www.spaceup.fr.

SpaceUp Poland livestream!

During this weekend (24-25th of November) SpaceUp Poland will take place in Warsaw.

It is great opportunity to meet people who are fascinated by space and excellent chance to discuss with them and share experience in this field. Traditional and local food with the atmosphere of the capital of the country will be a great background for the unconference and with inspiring presentations and talks will create an unforgettable SpaceUp Poland!

If for some reason you cannot take part in SpaceUp Poland,

you can reach us on our livestream channel:

 http://www.ustream.tv/channel/spaceuppl.

Starts at 11.00 AM, CEST, 24th November.

SpaceUp Poland is dedicated to the fact, that Poland became 20th European Space Agency member state this month, which is great milestone for all space and astronomy enthusiasts in Poland!

Germany’s first space unconference SpaceUp Stuttgart – a report

SpaceUp Stuttgart – Germany’s First Space Unconference
by Anja Frey and Andreas Hornig

SpaceUp Stuttgart participants and helpers in a group photo taken in the foyer of RZBW

Despite the surprise of this season’s first snow, space enthusiasts with very diverse backgrounds made their way to Stuttgart on October 27th for Germany’s first SpaceUp. Their effort was rewarded with interesting talks and people at SpaceUp Stuttgart, a space unconference . Unconferences are unconventional conferences. This means that there are no observers, only active participants. In contrast to regular conferences, for which you have to apply with an abstract and be accepted as a presenter, unconference participants simply prepare a little post-it note and stick it on the session grid wherever there is a free slot. In this way the unconference program is created spontaneously. SpaceUp was started in the U.S.A. where it spread quickly to several cities. The success of the American SpaceUps caused the concept to be exported all over the world, with new SpaceUps being founded regularly. Now, we brought SpaceUp to Germany for the first time!
The SpaceUp Stuttgart organizing team, Anja Frey and Andreas Hornig, are Aerospace Engineering students at the University of Stuttgart. They are volunteers who organize SpaceUp Stuttgart in order to share their passion about space. They wanted to use this unconference as a tool to raise awareness about space and an opportunity for space enthusiasts to exchange their ideas.
The event was free in order to enable everybody who is interested in space to be a part of it. Although the first snow may have kept a few registered participants from attending the unconference, there were more participants than originally expected. SpaceUp Stuttgart was a great event with inspiring talks, plenty of breaks, and time to get to know the other participants and discuss space topics. In essence, this is the very spirit of an unconference.

It’s All About the Participants

Dr. Chris Welch with his presentation about the new Institute for Interstellar Studies

Of the 63 participants who had registered ahead of time, 49 attended SpaceUp Stuttgart. Keeping true to the unconference theme, participants were not required to register, leading to a total of 77 space enthusiasts assembled for Germany’s first SpaceUp. Among others, representatives of European Space Agency (ESA), German Aerospace Center (DLR), University of Stuttgart, International Space University, Mars Society Deutschland, German Society for Aeronautics and Astronautics (DGLR), SpaceUp EU, Scientific Workgroup for Rocketry and Spaceflight (WARR), NEOshield, EADS Astrium, Fraunhofer IISB, VEXREDUS, and Space Generation Advisory Council were present. Besides experts from the space sector, the organizers specifically invited students and non-professional individuals with an interest in space. According to the unwritten first rule of unconferences, all participants were equal and given the same amount of time. This was not only a great opportunity for the laymen to learn from renowned specialists but also for the professionals to get in touch with the next generation and be inspired by presentations about student projects and new ideas.

SpaceUp Stuttgart participants and helpers

Thanks to the great help of Eva Dresel, Vanessa Kolb, Paul Rinck, August Bohn, Valentin Falkenhahn, Julian Franz, Marcel Frommelt, Ferdinand Hertel, Julian Herzog and Alex Liefke, everything went smoothly. They made sure the participants got their food and drinks on time, helped set up and clean up, filmed the presentations, took photos, registered the participants, and ensured that the event was perfect.

A Great Venue for an Amazing Space Unconference
The venue for SpaceUp Stuttgart was the modern Space Center Baden-Württemberg on the University of Stuttgart campus.

Space Center Baden-Württemberg (RZBW)

Thanks to its sophisticated architecture, the Space Center was the ideal choice of venue. The exhibits of satellite mock-ups and technology samples of thrusters and experiments, created a very special atmosphere adding to the SpaceUp experience. Besides the foyer, which was used for coffee and lunch breaks as well as the get-together after the sessions ended, three rooms were available for presentations. Furthermore, it is perfectly located in an area close to southern Germany, Switzerland and France. This location is very easily accessible by car and public transportation, thus enabling all participants to get there comfortably.

Living Session Grid
Since SpaceUp is an unconference, the program was not predetermined. The organizing team sent a preliminary suggested session grid based on the registrations to the participants in order to ease the logistical challenge of accommodating the overwhelming range of proposed talks and discussions.

Participants in front of the Session Grid

A short welcome by the hosts Andreas Hornig and Anja Frey was followed by an introduction of the Space Center Baden Württemberg and the Institute of Space Systems by Prof. Dr. Röser, Director of the Institute of Space Systems. A scheduled break was next so that the participants had enough time to post their talks onto the session grid. Throughout the entire day the participants kept adjusting the session grid, finding a free slot for their presentation or grouping them with similar topics. A total of three sessions with twenty presentations and four 60 seconds to land videos in three rooms were the result.

Space Talks and Discussions
The first session was started by DLR spokesman Andreas Schütz talking about “Wissenschafts- & Krisenkommunikation” (“Science and Crisis Communication”). He was followed by ESA’s Rüdiger Jehn whose topic was “What is wrong with Mercury?”. Rüdiger explained that with its several sunsets and rises in a nick of time, Mercury is a planet for romantics. In the next room, Michael Deiml from the Technical University of Munich,

SpaceUp Stuttgart participants finalizing their presentation

challenged his audience to decide which one of the WARR projects he would introduce to them. He was followed by Tobias Willerding from the HyEnD group at the University of Stuttgart. Tobias informed us of their hybrid rocket project. At the same time, Fernanda Maia presented the “Development Model of a Green Monoprop Thruster” prior to Claas Ziemke from OpenSimKit describing “System Simulation for dummies” in room three.
Immediately after the lunch break, ISU’s Chris Welch fascinated his audience by introducing the “Institute for Interstellar Studies”. Lothar Frey, Director of Fraunhofer IISB, explained “Cosmic Rays and Electronic Devices”. This presentation was followed by the ESA EAC delegation, Loredana Bessone and Pascal Renten who talked about “Training for Human Spaceflight using Analogues”.

Event poster with signatures of all participants

They showed an intriguing movie about the ESA CAVES mission. Simultaneously, Paul Nizenkov and Graeme Taylor presented their project “Establishment of a Spaceport Network Architecture”.
In room three, the participants met two representatives of shack e.V.: hadez told them about “Hackerspace Global Grid (HGG) for Distributed Groundstation Network”, while Timm talked about “Flutter – Timing Module of HGG”.
The final session was kicked off by Wissam Rammo from EADS Astrium who presented “InSight – Geophysical Monitoring Station Mission”. He was followed by Nicolay Kübler with “Mars Simulation on Earth” and Hannes Griebel with “The MIRIAM Flight Testing Concept: Dress Rehearsal for ARCHIMEDES”, both from the Mars Society Deutschland. Tobias Kuhn from the University of Stuttgart explained the VEXREDUS project and the “Rexus Bexus Student Experiment Campaign”. Next up was Dave Haslam who introduced the participants to the International Space University and their programs. Roland Gabrielli from the Institute of Space Systems gave a “Brief Overview on Current European Activities for the Sustainable Development of the Outer Solar System”. The program continued with Araba-Molly Acquaisie from NEOShield Astrium who talked about “NEOShield: Preparing to Protect the Planet!”. The final presentation was given by SpaceUp Europe organizer Remco Timmermanns who gave a T-5 talk on “Baikonur” and his trip to this very special place.
The sessions were moderated by Anja Frey, Andreas Hornig, Jennifer Neffgen and Manfred Ehresmann. After the sessions had ended the participants met up in the foyer for drinks, discussions, and getting to know each other.

60 Seconds to Land or Crash
SpaceUp Stuttgart started a new category for SpaceUps: The “60 Seconds to Land” videos. They are designed to provide a platform for those who could not make it to SpaceUp Stuttgart in person to present their projects, share their ideas and just say “hi” to the participants.
The first video was received from the European Astronaut Center.

ESA Astronaut Thomas Pesquet in his „60 Seconds to Land“ video transmission

ESA Astronaut Thomas Pesquet sent greetings to SpaceUp Stuttgart, encouraging the participants to keep talking about space. Thomas Sinn used this opportunity to introduce “Suaineadh (REXUS12)” and “StrathSat-R” in two short videos. Luca Foresta from the Austrian Space Forum OEWF took the audience into their Suit Lab for the Morocco Mars Analog Simulation. Their video raised the question “Why do you do Morocco Mars Analog Simulation and not at Mars Desert Research Station (MDRS)?” among the participants. We forwarded the question to OEWF and they answered via social media.
Three additional videos will be used exclusively online. In these “60 Seconds to Land” videos the Forschungsgemeinschaft Alternative Raumfahrt (FAR) presents their projects, the Blue Marble Initiative promotes their “One Flag in Space” campaign, and the organizers invite to India’s first SpaceUp.

Social Media and Participant Feedback
In order to promote SpaceUp Stuttgart on a small budget with a maximum impact the organizing team used social media. The Twitter accounts @spaceupstgt and @60secondstoland reached 120 followers and the Facebook page SpaceUpStuttgart achieved more than 140 “Likes” in a little over two months. The promotional YouTube video “SpaceUp Stuttgart – Your Space Unconference Unworded (Deutsch)” generated more than 700 clicks by October 2012.

The feedback, during and after the event was excellent. Participants tweeted during the talks and reached a large audience of interested followers. After reading our tweet about the frist snow Alex @4tuneQkie tweeted

A participant twitters about SpaceUp Stuttgart

Love to read tweets about #SpaceUp We send sun from Florida to #SnowUp @SpaceUpStgt today! Enjoy #space at its best! @SpaceUpConf

Remco Timmermanns @timmermannsr proclaimed via Twitter

The last 132 #SpaceUp tweets generated 337,440 impressions, reaching an audience of 132,134 people. Not bad! cc @SpaceUpStgt

on October 28th at 3:54 a.m.. Rüdiger Jehn blogged “What is an UNconference?” in the ESA rocket science category. The local newspaper Stuttgarter Zeitung published an article the very same day titled “SpaceUp in Stutgart – Von Sonnenstürmen und Plasmapartikeln (Of Solar Storms and Plasma Particles)”. NEOshield posted an article about “NEOshield presents at SpaceUp Stuttgart 2012” in their newsfeed. Participants told the organizers they had a great time and are looking forward to organizing their own SpaceUp soon. Naturally, we cannot wait to attend their SpaceUps!
We took videos of all the presentations in order to put them online. This is a great chance for those who could not make it to SpaceUp Stuttgart to listen to the inspiring presentations and get a better idea about SpaceUp.

Result

Moderators prepare for the sessions

Overall, SpaceUp Stuttgart was a great success! Even though we were surprised by an early snowstorm, more participants than expected attended the unconference. The very diverse presentations provided a variety of topics so that everyone could find a talk in which they were especially interested in. The new category “60 Seconds to Land” was received very well and will most likely be incorporated in future SpaceUps all over the world. The Space Center Baden-Württemberg proved itself to be a great venue for SpaceUp Stuttgart. Most importantly, both the participants and the organizers enjoyed the event tremendously and are looking forward to the sequel.

References:
SpaceUp Stuttgart
Contact: spaceupstuttgart@aerospaceresearch.net
Web:

SpaceUp launches in Europe

=== Press Release ===

SpaceUp unconference launches in Europe

Space is boring! Space is a world of rocket scientists and geek engineers. Even more so now that the Space Shuttle has retired. Humanity has been on the moon and launched a few satellites. Now it is time to start focusing on our own planet again.

“Space is boring” is the title of a famous presentation, first shown at the SpaceUp unconference in San Diego in 2010. Objective of the presentation is to show the opposite is true: developments in the global space sector have never been as exciting as they are now!

SpaceUp is a new communication channel, rooted in the social media world. It is an unconference, meaning that the event is organized, apart from the actual program itself. The conference attendees determine the event content themselves. All people attending are expected to fill a conference slot with a space-related subject, gradually filling a blank grid of time slots. This very open format allows a great variety of visions, ideas and projects to be presented and discussed. It enables all levels in the space and astronomy sector to discuss topics they deem relevant. From space entrepreneurs, scientists, educators and futurists to students and enthusiasts, all are welcome.

The SpaceUp concept was born in the United States in 2010. Unhappy with the fixed-format traditional space conferences, a few space professionals took the ‘unconference’ or ‘bar camp’ format and added a space-theme. In the following two years the concept spread all over the North American continent, with events in dozens of cities. In September 2012 SpaceUp becomes a truly global platform, with the first event in Europe.

Six young space bloggers and tweeps from four European countries teamed up to test SpaceUp in the old continent. Their efforts resulted in SpaceUp Europe being held at the space-themed Cosmodrome Planetarium in Genk, Belgium, on 22 and 23 September 2012. Based on the great success in North America, they are certain they can spread the excitement about global space exploration to a new audience in Europe. In order to reach their goal they have teamed up with ESA, the International Space University and DLR, which are all supporting the event.

Shortly after registration opened there are already 50 attendees, all waiting for their opportunity to share their vision on the future of the European space industry. There are still slots available, so make sure you don’t miss your chance to be among the early adopters of SpaceUp Europe!

Go to spaceup.org/Europe for more information and registration.

SpaceUp Europe auto sequence start

With about 7 weeks to go until launch, we are happy to see that all systems are go and we have engaged the automatic start sequence. Well, entirely automatic it is not… It requires a bit additional work and learnings on the way to organize a SpaceUp event in another part of the world. Venue and date are set, ticket sales have started (could need a little boost though) and the website is being completed with travel and lodging details. We are also founding the SpaceUp Europe Foundation, enabling our sponsors to get tax deductions on their support.

Please keep an eye out to more news on this website soon!

Send SpaceUp to SXSW

We need your help!

SpaceUp organizers Mike Doornbos, Dennis Bonilla, Chris RadcliffTim Bailey (also of Yuri’s Night), and Jen Scheer (also of the Space Tweep Society) are teaming up with astronaut Ron Garan to show the South By Southwest (SXSW) conference what an awesome group of space enthusiasts can do when united by social media.

The proposed panel is called How to Win Friends and Influence Space Exploration. As the description says:

Learn why these people got so passionately involved in space, how they became good friends over the Internet, and what they’ve created to make measurable change toward a more awesome tomorrow.

SXSW judges will ultimately decide whether to include our panel, but you can help by voting for us or adding your comment to the panel picker page.