Calgary Herald

Astronaut tweets photo of city from ISS

NASA astronaut Meir tweets photo from Internatio­nal Space Station

- BRODIE THOMAS

From 400 kilometres away, Calgary fits nicely in a single photo frame.

U.S. astronaut Jessica Meir tweeted a shot of Cowtown on Monday afternoon from the Internatio­nal Space Station, wishing people below a good night.

Although the tweet came late afternoon for residents of Calgary, the ISS functions on Greenwich Mean Time, meaning it was nearly midnight for Meir.

Meir suggested she had at least passed through Calgary on her way to Banff. According to her Wikipedia entry, she completed her post-doctoral work at the University of British Columbia.

The 42-year-old marine biologist and psychologi­st has been aboard the ISS since Sept. 25, 2019. In October she took part in the first all-female spacewalk to replace a faulty power unit.

Meir’s photo shows at least one significan­t change from another time we got to see Calgary from the ISS.

Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield’s photo from nearly seven years ago lacks a portion of the ring road in the city’s southeast. It also has a more distinctly orange hue.

That’s because the city has changed its street lights from high-pressure sodium vapour lamps to more energy-efficient LEDS.

According to the city’s website, the replacemen­t of 80,000 street lights cost $32 million up front but resulted in an ongoing savings of $5 million per year in energy costs.

U.S. astronaut Scott Kelly captured Calgary midway through the street light transition. In his November 2015 photo, certain communitie­s — mainly in the southwest — stand out with their new whiter LED street lights.

The city could soon have a hometown astronaut snapping photos form the ISS. Calgary-born Jenni Sidey-gibbons is set to graduate from NASA’S astronaut candidate program, qualifying her to fly in space.

The graduation ceremony will be available for streaming on NASA TV beginning at 8:30 a.m. Calgary time on Friday.

Sidey- Gibbons and fellow Albertan Joshua Kutryk — the other Canadian astronaut set to graduate — may not be limited to low-earth orbit in their upcoming missions. The U.S. is ramping up its Artemis mission with an eye to going back to the moon. The Canadian Space Agency has signed on to take part in that potential mission.

 ?? JESSICA MEIR/TWITTER ?? The changing face of Calgary, as seen from space, is shown in this photo taken from the Internatio­nal Space Station on Tuesday by U.S. astronaut Jessica Meir.
JESSICA MEIR/TWITTER The changing face of Calgary, as seen from space, is shown in this photo taken from the Internatio­nal Space Station on Tuesday by U.S. astronaut Jessica Meir.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES NASA/AFP VIA ?? NASA astronaut Jessica Meir tweeted a photo of Calgary from 400 km above the Earth.
GETTY IMAGES NASA/AFP VIA NASA astronaut Jessica Meir tweeted a photo of Calgary from 400 km above the Earth.

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