CGHS – Powered by  CareerWise

Yuri’s Night Aeronautical Expo 2025 (for students) at the Air Force Museum of NZ! April 12th

Yuri’s Night Aeronautical Expo 2025 (for students) at the Air Force Museum of NZ! April 12th

Start Date: 12th Apr, 2025

End Date: 12th Apr, 2025

Start Time: 09:30 am

Venue: Wigram Airforce Museum

Explore Here

We’ve got an amazing FREE event this weekend at the Air Force Museum in Christchurch!

Are you Space mad? or perhaps you have aspirations to be a pilot or aerospace engineer?

The Christchurch Rocketeers presents our annual Yuri’s Night Aeronautical Expo at the Air Force Museum of New Zealand on Saturday 12th April from 9.30am to 4pm!

Come along and check out our awesome exhibitors, speakers, and activities:

– Explore a Planetarium with Spaceward Bound!

– Control an RC Mars Rover

– Build and launch a Hobby Rocket (spaces limited)

– Check out the international Competition winning rocket and other projects from UC Aerospace

– Find out how you can get involved in Hobby or Amateur Rocketry with the Christchurch Rocketeers and their massive display of rockets!

– Test your skills on Air New Zealand Training Academy’s Avionics board

– See how local and national groups like Aerospace NZ and the Aotearoa Aerospace Academy support the Aerospace industry and education in New Zealand

– Take a look at the Sun through a telescope with the Canterbury Astronomical Society (weather permitting) or grab some of their awesome Space/Astronomy Swag.

– Learn how missile are controlled in flight with the Royal Aeronautical Society’s Canterbury branch.

– Find out how balloons help us understand the weather and gain better vantage points with Oasis Aero

– Or for the more inquisitive minds, come along to our guest speakers throughout the day:

  • – Sarah Kessans – Associate Professor – University of Canterbury
    Off the Earth, for the Earth: Aotearoa New Zealand’s role in science in space

Dr Sarah Kessans is an Associate Professor in the School of Product Design at the University of Canterbury. Sarah is leading research programmes which combine both aerospace and biology. In 2017, Sarah was selected as one of 50 Finalist Interviewees (out of 18,000+ applications) in NASA’s Astronaut Candidate selection process. Using the perspectives and connections gained during the selection process, Sarah has established programmes for New Zealand scientists to use the unique microgravity environments of space stations for research. In 2024, Sarah’s team launched New Zealand’s first mission to the International Space Station to test a prototype of a facility to study protein crystallisation in microgravity, which will be used by the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries. Insights from the mission and the facilities Sarah’s team is building will help develop more effective medicines and vaccines among other applications. Sarah’s talk will give an overview how the science that her teams and teams around the world are conducting can help expand opportunities for space exploration while benefiting life on Earth.

  • – Karina Leppik – Astronomy from unusual places

Astronomy from unusual places

Karina Leppik is an astronomer, and has worked at telescopes located on mountaintops, Antarctica, and even airplanes.  She will share some of her experiences with telescopes at the South Pole, and onboard NASA’s airborne observatory, SOFIA.

 

  • – Prospero ‘Paco’ Uybarreta – Principal Experimental Test Pilot/Director 
    Paco has been a professional pilot for 26 years.  He was a U.S. Air Force officer for 14 years, flying jets as an operational combat pilot, flight instructor, experimental test pilot.  After the active-duty military, he has worked as an experimental test pilot for eight different aerospace companies around the world.  He has logged over 5,300 flight hours in 64 different manned aircraft, including 21 different jets such as the T-38, X-62, F-15, U-2, MiG-15, and Airbus 220.  A 2009 graduate of the elite USAF Test Pilot School, Paco earned his Bachelor’s degree in Aerospace Engineering from Boston University in 1998, three Master’s degrees in engineering, aeronautics, and business, and is currently a Ph.D. Candidate in Mechanical Engineering at UC

  • – Athrun Willoughby-Martin – Student Mentor – General Exec CHC Rocketeers
    Athrun holds the record as the youngest male in the world to hold his Level 1 & Level 2 high-Power Rocketry certifications, having gained them at Age 11 with the New Zealand Rocketry Association. He also acts as a student mentor for children and students interested in taking part in Hobby/Amateur rocketry.

The event is entirely FREE!

Event timetable on the link.

https://www.christchurchrocketeers.space/yurisnight
https://www.facebook.com/share/15HuG6uT3r/

Read full post on CareerWise >