Nick Kanas: Psychology of Spaceflight 
Nick Kanas: Psychology of Spaceflight
by SETI
Video Lecture 34 of 42
Not yet rated
Views: 2,422
Date Added: November 24, 2010

Lecture Description

September 29, 2010 

SETI Archive: seti.org/talks

Recent studies on-orbit have provided information on important psychological and interpersonal issues that affect crewmembers and mission control personnel who are involved with near-Earth space missions. However, the extreme distances, communication delays, and increased crewmember autonomy that will characterize missions to Mars and beyond will introduce additional psychosocial stressors never before experienced. Professor Kanas will discuss these stressors and their impact on people traveling to the outer solar system and nearby stars, including those resulting from new technologies, such as traveling at a significant fraction of the speed of light, putting crewmembers in suspended animation, or creating giant self-contained generation ships of colonists who will not return to Earth. Professor Kanas is the author of two books: Space Psychology and Psychiatry and Star Maps: History, Artistry, and Cartography.

Course Index

  1. Dale Cruikshank: Outer Solar System Ices
  2. Adrian Brown: Poles of Mars
  3. Bruce Damer: Simulating Life's Origin
  4. Laurance Doyle: Mongolian and other Historic Solar Eclipses
  5. Daniel Rasky: Augustine Commission - The Way Forward on US Manned Spaceflight
  6. Sergei Dubovsky: Observing String Multiverse with Astrophysical Black Holes
  7. Conny Aerts - Asteroseismology
  8. Carol Stoker - Phoenix Mission and Habitability
  9. ames Benford - Interstellar Beacons
  10. Brad Bailey - Life in Basaltic Glass in the oceanic basins
  11. Nancy McKeown: Mawrth Vallis, Mars
  12. Bob Pappalardo: Europa Jupiter Orbiter
  13. David Jewitt:- Solar System Primordial Ice Reservoirs
  14. Harry Jones: Starship Life Support
  15. Jeff Moore: Mysteries on Titan
  16. Farid Salama: Interstellar Clouds
  17. Mark Showalter: Marine Biodiversity
  18. Jen Blank: ChemCam on Mars Science Lab Rover
  19. Pete Worden, Pavel Podvig, Will Marshall: Nuclear Weapons and Space Weapons
  20. Samantha Blair: Interstellar Medium Interference
  21. Jon Jenkins: Kepler Worlds
  22. Dan Lubin: Maunder Minimum
  23. Monika Kress: Habitable Planets
  24. Intersection of Physics and Biology - Jan Liphardt
  25. Mark Marley: Atmospheres of Brown Dwarfs and Exoplanets
  26. Sarah Church: Polarized Cosmic Microwave Background
  27. Peter Jenniskens: Hayabusa Reentry
  28. Don Lowe: Late Heavy Bombardment
  29. Mark Krumholz: Star Formation Rate
  30. Heather Knutson: Exoplanet Atmospheres
  31. David Des Marais: Exploring Mars for Habitable Environments
  32. Ralph Lorenz: Titan Unveiled
  33. REU Students Review 2010
  34. Nick Kanas: Psychology of Spaceflight
  35. Rus Belikov: Beyond Kepler - Imaging Exo-Earths
  36. Bill Colson: Free Electron Laser Communications
  37. David Korsmeyer: NASA Future Human Missions
  38. Pascal Lee: Haughton-Mars Project
  39. Chris McKay: Titan - Past, Present, Future
  40. Nathalie Cabrol: Lakes on Mars
  41. Margarita Marinova: Martian Dichotomy
  42. Ellen Howell: Radar videos of asteroids

Course Description

Carl Sagan Center/SETI Institute Colloquium Series

 

Attend a colloquium! They are FREE, open to the public and held from noon to 1pm, every Wednesday at the SETI Institute, 515 N. Whisman Road, Mountain View, California.

Comments

There are no comments. Be the first to post one.
  Post comment as a guest user.
Click to login or register:
Your name:
Your email:
(will not appear)
Your comment:
(max. 1000 characters)
Are you human? (Sorry)