Farbrengen on the Space Coast Celebrates First Jewish Astronaut, Garrett E. Reisman to Reside on the Space Station

Astronaut Steve Maclean (Left) speaking with Rabbi Zvi Konikov.

A unique Farbrengen (Jewish gathering) was held Monday night at the Cocoa Beach Hilton with family and friends of Garrett Erin Reisman, the first Jewish Astronaut to reside on the International Space Station just hours before Shuttle Endeavor roared towards the Space Station in a spectacular night launch from Kennedy Space Center.

Organizer, Rabbi Zvi Konikov, director of Chabad of the Space & Treasure Coasts first met Dr. Reissman in Israel after the Shuttle Columbia Tragedy. Reisman flew to Israel as NASA’s representative to console Rona Ramon and Ilan’s family. The Ramons travelled from Israel to share in the joy of Reisman’s launch of Shuttle Endeavor to the Space Station. Asaf Ramon, eldest son of the late Ilan Ramon, received a special release from the Israeli Air Force to attend the launch.

More pictures in the Extended Article!

Special kosher dinners were packed by Chabad of the Space & Treasure Coasts for guests who requested kosher food. Reissman’s first cousin, Robert Steinberg and his daughter Lauren, were delighted to receive the packages and join the other Jewish guests gathering for a Farbrengen and toasts for a safe and successful trip, arranged by Rabbi Zvi Konikov.

Astronaut Steven MacLean joined the conversations with Rabbi Konikov as they discussed the Jewish Astronauts in NASA’s history.

Shuttle Endeavour and seven astronauts are en route to the International Space Station today after a unique one of a kind night launch from Cape Canaveral.

Brilliantly lighting up the dark sky, space shuttle Endeavour, the 18-story spaceship, roared off Launch Pad 39A at 2:28 a.m. EDT Tuesday, rolled on its back and then arced out over the Atlantic Ocean as it headed toward an orbit high above Earth. The station was flying 225 miles above the Pacific Ocean southeast of Perth, Australia at the time.

Endeavor is carrying the STS-123 crew, a module of Japan’s Kibo laboratory and a Canadian robotic system to begin the 25th mission to the International Space Station. Astronaut Reisman will move into the Space Station at the conclusion of this mission and will stay there for several months.

Reissman emailed Rabbi Konikov just four days ago from his isolated residence at Cape Canaveral in preparation for launch to thank him for his blessings and best wishes.

Reisman will return to Earth with the crew of STS-124, currently planned for May 2008.

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (AP) – Astronauts bound for orbit this week will dabble in science fiction, assembling a “monstrous” two-armed space station robot that will rise like Frankenstein from its transport bed.

Putting together Dextre, the robot, will be one of the main jobs for the seven Endeavour astronauts, who are scheduled to blast off in the wee hours of Tuesday, less than three weeks after the last shuttle flight.

They’re also delivering the first piece of Japan’s massive Kibo space station lab, a float-in closet for storing tools, experiments and spare parts. For the first time, each of the five major international space station partners will own a piece of the real estate.

At 16 days, the mission will be NASA’s longest space station trip ever and will include five spacewalks, the most ever performed while a shuttle is docked there. Three of those spacewalks will feature Dextre, which is sure to steal the show.

With 11-foot arms, a shoulder span of nearly 8 feet and a height of 12 feet, the Canadian Space Agency’s Dextre – short for dexterous and pronounced like Dexter – is more than a little intimidating, at least for astronaut Garrett Reisman.

“Now I wouldn’t go as far to say that we’re worried it’s going to go run amok and take over the space station or turn evil or anything because we all know how it’s operated and it doesn’t have a lot of its own intelligence,” Reisman told The Associated Press last week.

“But I’ll tell you something … He’s enormous and to see him with his giant arms, it is a little scary. It’s a little monstrous, it is.”

Dextre will be flying up aboard Endeavour in pieces, and it will be up to a team of spacewalking astronauts to assemble the 3,400-pound robot and attach it to the outside of the space station. That job will fall to Reisman, Michael Foreman and Richard Linnehan.

“I feel kind of like dad on Christmas Eve, you know, opening up this present and trying to put it together for the son or daughter and going, ‘Whoa, what have I gotten myself into here with this ‘some assembly required’ part of the space station,” Foreman said.

Reisman, who will be moving into the space station, can’t wait to see Dextre rise from its shuttle transport pallet, rotating up “almost like it’s Frankenstein’s monster coming alive.”

In reality, there’s nothing sinister about Dextre. The robot, in fact, was once in the running to be the Hubble Space Telescope’s savior.

Following the 2003 Columbia disaster, NASA canceled the last remaining Hubble repair mission by shuttle astronauts because of safety concerns, and considered sending Dextre up to do the job. The shuttle flight was restored after a change at NASA’s helm – it’s scheduled for late summer – and Dextre went back to being a space station assistant.

Dextre – which cost more than $200 million – was created by the same Canadian team that built the space shuttle and space station robot arms.

Equipped with a tool holster, Dextre is designed to assist spacewalking astronauts and, ultimately, to take over some of their dangerous outdoor work.

Dextre can pivot at the waist, and has seven joints per arm. Its hands, or grippers, have built-in socket wrenches, cameras and lights. Only one arm is designed to move at a time to keep the robot stable and avoid a two-arm collision. The robot has no face or legs, and with its long arms certainly doesn’t look human.

Space station astronauts will be able to control Dextre, as will flight controllers on the ground. The robot will be attached at times to the end of the space station arm, and also be able to ride by itself along the space station arm’s railway.

Canadian officials said they’re convinced Dextre could have pulled off the Hubble repair job, and should have no problems replacing old batteries and other space station parts.

“It’s quite surprising what a robot like Dextre can do with its sense of touch and its precision,” said Daniel Rey, a Canadian Space Agency engineer who heads the project.

Dextre has only three tools, for now, versus the more than 100 tools available to spacewalking astronauts, Rey said. It will probably take months to learn how to properly use the robot; its first real job could come next year.
Linnehan, who worked on Hubble in 2002, wonders just how much Dextre will be able to do.

Even though it’s suited for space station maintenance, astronauts are faster, Linnehan said. As for Hubble, he said Dextre cannot compare to a human repairman because it lacks fine motor control, and cannot think and react to problems that might crop up.

That said, Linnehan acknowledges it’s “a cool project” that reminds him of Japanese animation shows from decades past, namely Gigantor the space-age robot. NASA officials agree that a big part of Dextre is learning how robots operate in space, for future exploration.

Dextre, by the way, isn’t necessarily a “he.”

“I tend to use ‘he’ because I think Dextre is a masculine name,” Rey said. “But it’s a robot. It’s tele-operated. It doesn’t have artificial intelligence yet. So I need to be more careful when I say ‘he.’ ”

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