重口味SM

A front-row seat to space: U of T alumna earns elite designation by CSA/NASA to control space robotics missions

Photo of  Kristen Facciol
Kristen Facciol in the Mission Control Center of NASA鈥檚 Johnson Space Center. Facciol has become the 14th Canadian to earn a CSA/NASA Robotics Flight Controller Certification (photo courtesy of Kristen Facciol/NASA)
When Canadian astronaut David Saint-Jacques is on the International Space Station this winter, Canadian space roboticist Kristen Facciol will likely be at the controls.
 
The alumna of 重口味SM's Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering has just become the 14th Canadian to earn a CSA/NASA robotics flight controller certification, putting her in charge of timeline management, procedure development, and overall situational awareness for the robotics systems onboard the space station during real-time operations.
 
鈥淥f the 14 Canadian flight controllers, five of us are U of T Engineering grads, which I think is amazing,鈥 says Facciol. 鈥淲hat was really cool to me was that we now have 14 Canadian astronauts and 14 Canadian flight controllers, so that similarity just shows you what an honour it is to be a part of this group.鈥
 
Facciol is an operations engineer with the Canadian Space Agency鈥檚 Mission Control Group and is stationed at NASA鈥檚 Johnson Space Center in Houston, Texas. Next year she will return to the CSA to support operations from the control centre in Saint-Hubert, Que. She launched her career with MDA (now Maxar Technologies), the company that designed and built the world-famous Canadarm, which provided the initial opportunity to work with the CSA.
 
鈥淭hat was when I learned about the flight controller position,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚t was the first time I realized there were actually Canadians controlling Canadian hardware in a Canadian facility, and that was completely surreal. And then I set my eyes on that career goal.鈥
 
The certification is the culmination of a year-long training process, involving self-study, classes within the robotics group and with other NASA teams, 鈥渒nowledge review鈥 sessions that resemble a verbal thesis defence, and ultimately, a series of six to 10 simulations of varying complexity. Facciol鈥檚 final simulation was a spacewalk with a crewmember on the end of the Canadarm2, in which she had to effectively work with other teams to negotiate and resolve a series of failures or anomalies introduced into the scenario in real time.
 
The intense experience demands a balance of strong technical knowledge and what NASA calls the seven foundations of flight operations: competence, confidence, discipline, responsibility, teamwork, toughness and vigilance. It鈥檚 a combination for which Facciol says her education in engineering science prepared her well.
 
鈥淚t really teaches you to work in a multidisciplinary environment, to work with people from different backgrounds and different strengths, and to be able to manage an overwhelming number of things,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 have done it without U of T Engineering as a background.鈥
 
In addition to acting in her new role as mobile servicing system-task officer for the upcoming spacewalk Saint-Jacques will support, Facciol has been assigned to three other missions scheduled for fall 2018 and winter 2019: receiving a new set of batteries from a Japanese cargo vehicle for installation on the space station, designing the procedures for a robotics refuelling mission demonstration, and supporting a SpaceX commercial resupply mission with their Dragon vehicle.
 
For Facciol, having a front-row seat to space is awe-inspiring. 鈥淭o walk through buildings and cross paths with astronauts and people who have had such a huge influence on human spaceflight鈥t鈥檚 almost like this dream world that you knew existed but never thought you could be a part of.
 
"I still pinch myself every day.鈥
 

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