Alice is an internationally recognised leader in the field of space archaeology and author of the award-winning book Dr Space Junk vs the Universe: Archaeology and the Future (MIT Press, 2019).
In collaboration with NASA and Chapman University, she is part of a team conducting the first archaeological study of the International Space Station.
Alice is also a Vice-Chair of the Global Expert Group on Sustainable Lunar Activities and a member of the Advisory Council of the Space Industry Association of Australia.
Alice is an Associate Professor at Flinders University, she tweets as @drspacejunk and blogs at Space Age Archaeology.
Julia Mitchell
Senior Spacecraft Systems Engineer at Sitael Australia
Along with being a Senior Spacecraft Systems Engineer Julia is also a current Director of the SIAA.
With over 10 years’ experience in the upstream and downstream areas of the space sector in Australia and internationally, Julia is currently working on a variety of small satellite projects (<300 kg).
Previously, Julia has led the SBAS test-bed project at FrontierSI as the Program Manager and worked as a Spacecraft Systems Engineer on large communications satellites
SES-16/GovSat-1 and Jabiru-1 for SES and NewSat respectively. Julia has completed a Master of Science in Astronautics and Space Engineering from Cranfield University in the UK and combined Bachelor of Engineering (Aerospace) with first class honours and a Bachelor of Science (Physics) from UNSW.
Julia is passionate about growing a sustainable space industry here in Australia.
Dr Amy Parker
Satellite Operations
& Data Manager at CSIRO
Amy is an up- and down-stream Earth Observation (EO) specialist with ten years of experience spanning satellite operations, EO data management and EO applications research and development. She is Vice President of Earth Observation Australia and sits on the Advisory Board of the Australian Space Data Analysis Facility and the Programme Board of the inter-governmental Group on Earth Observations.
At CSIRO Amy manages operations for Australia's first-ever sovereign EO satellite capability, NovaSAR-1, and runs a complementary Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) Science program. She also works as part of the AquaWatch Australia mission team and leads several international projects within the CSIRO Centre for EO.
Amy was named finalist for the Australian Space Industry’s 2019 Rising Star of the Year award and in 2020 was awarded the CSIRO Women in Science Career Award for Digital, National Facilities and Collections.
Julia Dickinson
Chief Engineer - Military Satellite Communications at Lockheed Martin Australia Pty Ltd
Julia is an experienced Space industry leader with demonstrated skills spanning all aspects of satellite life-cycle over a wide range of spacecraft platforms. She is skilled in technical requirements development, technical negotiations, spacecraft manufacture, launch services, space and ground segment testing, satellite broadband, operations and spectrum management.
"The General Assembly declares 4 to 10 October World Space Week to celebrate each year at the international level the contributions of space science and technology to the betterment of the human condition" UN General Assembly resolution, 6 December 1999.
Last year more than 8,000 events took place across 96 countries to celebrate "The Moon: Gateway to the Stars" themed week. This year World Space week celebrates "Women in Space" with the theme being "Satellites Improve Life."
WOMEN IN SPACE - EVENT DETAILS
Location: VIRTUAL EVENT
Date & Time: Wednesday 6th October, 12:00pm - 1:00pm AEST
A dedicated channel for all things in Space, including Defence and Military Technology and related Aeronautics, Information Systems, Communication Systems and Space Exploration.
ASITII FESTIVAL OF SPACE - NOVEMBER
2021
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