Friday, April 26, 2024
27 C
Brunei Town

Surgeon, scientist named Japan’s first new astronauts in 13 years

TOKYO (AFP) – Japan’s space agency JAXA named its first new astronaut candidates in over 13 years yesterday, with a surgeon and a climate scientist chosen from over 4,000 applicants.

Ayu Yoneda, a 28-year-old surgeon for Tokyo’s Japanese Red Cross Medical Center, will become just the third woman ever to join the space training programme. Japan’s six current astronauts are men.

She will be joined by Makoto Suwa, 46, a senior disaster risk management specialist at the World Bank, who made the cut after an unsuccessful first application over a decade ago.

Yoneda said she was “elated and surprised” to learn she had been chosen.

“I felt a sense of responsibility and mission,” she told reporters.

Suwa, speaking by video from the United States (US), said he was “so excited that I haven’t been able to sleep”.

The pair, chosen from 4,127 applicants, will begin a two-year training programme and, if successful, could join International Space Station missions and become the first Japanese astronauts to reach the Moon.

Japan and the US announced last year they would cooperate on a plan to put a Japanese astronaut on the lunar surface by the end of the decade.

Astronaut candidates for the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency Ayu Yoneda and Makoto Suwa (on screen) pose after a press conference in Tokyo. PHOTO: AFP
spot_img

Latest

spot_img