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Fri, Dec 23, 2011

ISS Crew Hangs Christmas Stockings

But Chestnuts Roasting On Open Fire Considered Doubtful

People who have to work away from home during the holidays always try to make special accommodations to get that feeling of home, but what do you do when you're a couple hundred miles in space? If you're an astronaut aboard the International Space Station, you hope there's some holiday cheer packed in those unmanned Russian supply capsules.

Christmas stockings, supplied by Wyle's expert "space-rated" seamstresses, have been delivered and are now hung aboard the Space Station to give astronauts that special feeling of home. The stockings and presents were delivered in November when the Progress 45P re-supply vehicle docked with the Space Station.

"We know that personal holiday items really help astronauts reduce the home sickness that is natural when someone is so far from home," said Wyle's Steve Vander Ark, who manages the company's Behavioral, Health and Performance section. The work is part of Wyle's 10-year bioastronautics contract, under which the company provides a wide range of medical and health-related services to NASA.

The section's mission is to identify psychiatric, psychological, psychosocial and psychophysiological factors that could impact extended-duration space missions and to develop countermeasures to facilitate adaptation to the space environment.

Among many other areas, the Wyle section is responsible for supporting astronauts and their family members during all mission phases. Wyle personnel assist the astronauts in monitoring and maintaining their behavioral health, well-being and performance during International Space Station and Shuttle missions.

"Long-duration spaceflight on the International Space Station means that astronauts and cosmonauts not only work in space, but they 'live' there, too," said Vander Ark. "At Wyle, we try to make the space station a little more liveable. A little more like home.

"A common thread among all partners and cultures is that they celebrate specific events and holidays. Part of the psychological support that Wyle provides is to ensure the events and holidays, as well as mission milestones, are celebrated. Having these celebrations facilitates a cohesive team onboard the station.

"Providing a few holiday decorations helps the astronauts and cosmonauts make the place a little more festive. It helps the crew to celebrate the season and provide a connection to what's happening back at home. Holidays are a time for family and Wyle also arranges several opportunities for the astronauts to have two-way videoconferences with their families by way of the videoconferencing equipment that we have set up in their Earth-bound homes."

A multi-colored Nomex Christmas tree, fabricated by Wyle's Dona Hooker and her soft goods team in Houston, was sent aboard the STS-112 shuttle mission in October, 2002. Each year, new stockings are made and customized for each astronaut and cosmonaut, and then flown to the station on a mission just before the holiday season.

FMI: www.wyle.com

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