NASA engineers fly to Thailand Join the mission to set up a test system to send equipment to the International Space Station with KU.

NASA engineers fly to Thailand Join the mission to set up a test system to send equipment to the International Space Station with KU.

Asst. Prof. Dr. Nattaporn Chattham, Principal Investigator in Space Research Cooperation Project Kasetsart University (KU) later revealed Mr. Tyler Hatch, Aerospace Engineer or Research Aerospace Engineer under Fluids and Combustion Division, NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio, USA, met with Dr. Chongrak Watcharinrat, KU Chancellor on the occasion of traveling. Thai To carry out a mission to set up payload generation systems for liquid crystal experiments (Liquid Crystal) in space under a Memorandum of Understanding between KU and the United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in the study of liquid crystals or Liquid Crystals in space, with Assoc. John B Mcquillen, Director of the Fluids and Combustion Division, NASA Glenn Research Center, commissioned aerospace engineer Mr. Tyler Hatch to Thailand to set up a payload system for liquid crystal experiments in space by NASA Headquarter in Washington, D.C. be a planner and approved integration to connect this payload to Leidos’ KERMIT microscope, which is now aboard the ISS.

“Mr. Tyler Hatch will be coordinating with engineers from Leidos to set up a payload connection system led by a team of KU researchers led by him and Asst. physics Faculty of Science KU and engineers from GISTDA, led by Dr. Nattawat Hongkanchanakul and Dr. Sittiporn Channamsin, designed the And created according to the memorandum of understanding that NASA and KU signed together,” Asst. Prof. Dr. Nattaporn said.

Asst. Prof. Dr. Nattaporn said that The design now details the payload generation in the connected electronics section. and the hardware part To test in NASA’s first standard of sending equipment to the International Space Station, known as the SRR or Science Requirement Review, and then to the Preliminary Design Review, or PDR, the next standard. Of the five standards NASA has set to allow equipment to be docked on the International Space Station.

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