Sultan bin Salman Al Saud , the first Arab astronaut who flew on STS-51-G aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery in 1985
To date, there have been six astronauts from Arab nations, also called "najmonauts"[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] (from Arabic نجم (najm), meaning 'star', and Ancient Greek ναύτης (nautes), meaning 'sailor')[ 5] [ 6] who have flown to space.[ 7] [ 8]
Prince Sultan bin Salman Al Saud of Saudi Arabia flew in the US Space Shuttle in 1985.[ 9] [ 10] [ 11] Syrian astronaut Muhammed Faris made a space flight in 1987, as part of a joint Syrian-Soviet mission.[ 12] [ 13] [ 14] In 2019 Hazza Al Mansouri of the United Arab Emirates flew in the Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft to the International Space Station and in 2023 Sultan Al Neyadi from the United Arab Emirates flew to the International Space Station aboard the SpaceX Dragon crew capsule.[ 15] [ 16] [ 17] Al Neyadi was later joined during his mission by Ali Al-Qarni and the first Arab female, Saudi Rayyanah Barnawi, both from Saudi Arabia.[ 18] [ 19] [ 20] [ 21]
Saudi astronauts
In 1985, the Arab Organization of Space Communications nominated Sultan bin Salman Al Saud . Originally a civilian pilot holding a commercial pilots licence,[ 9] Al Saud, a member of the House of Saud , was born in Riyadh, to King Salman of Saudi Arabia , and holds a bachelor's degree of Arts in Media from the University of Denver, Colorado. Al Saud undertook high-level training before his flight, including: how to deploy the Arab satellite at a distance of 320 km above the Earth's surface, as well as how to use a camera from the unit (Hamlad - 500) to take pictures of geological features of the Arabian Peninsula.
In 2023, Ali AlQarni and Rayyanah Barnawi became the first Saudi astronauts who traveled to the ISS on the Axiom 2 private mission. Rayyanah was the first female Arab astronaut.[ 22] [ 23] [ 24] [ 25]
Emirati astronauts
On 25 September 2019, Hazza Al Mansouri became the first Emirati to become an astronaut, travelling in the Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft to the International Space Station .[ 26]
During his short stay aboard the ISS, Al Mansouri conducted 15 experiments created by UAE school students and selected under an MBRSC "Science in space" competition,[ 27] [ 28] conducted Earth observation experiments, filmed the first ever tour of the ISS in Arabic and became the first Middle eastern person to be studied following time in microgravity.[ 29]
Sultan Al Neyadi became the second Emirati astronaut who traveled to the ISS on the SpaceX Crew-6 mission. Nora Al Matrooshi and Mohammad Al Mulla are other UAE astronauts.
Syrian astronaut
Muhammed Faris was a Syrian astronaut born in Aleppo in 1951.[ 12] Faris was the first Syrian astronaut and second Arab into space, flying in the Soviet spacecraft Soyuz M3 (TM-2 ) to space station Mir on 22 July 1987 with two Soviet cosmonauts in the program for cooperation in space between Syria and the Soviet Union . He is credited with carrying the first recorded Earth dirt into space, which was a vial carrying soil from Damascus.[ 30]
Astronaut of Iraqi descent
On 25 September 2019, Jessica Meir whose father is of Sephardic Jewish descent and was born in Baghdad ,[ 31] travelled in the Soyuz MS-15 spacecraft to the International Space Station .[ 32]
She delivered an empowering video message of support to kids on the Hope Buses in Baghdad.[ 33]
List
See also
References
^ "From Sultan AlNeyadi to Hazzaa AlMansoori; meet the 'Najmonaut's of the Arab world" . me.mashable.com . 2023-03-03. Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ Nasir, Sarwat (2020-10-08). "Forget astronauts, meet the 'najmonauts': experts coin a new word for Arab space explorers" . The National . Retrieved 2023-01-31 .
^ "Experts want region to boldly go with a new name for Arab astronauts" . 9 October 2020. Retrieved 2023-01-31 – via PressReader.
^ Web Desk. "UAE's Sultan AlNeyadi now a 'najmonaut': Meet the only 4 Arabs in this elite circle of space explorers" . Khaleej Times . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ Bullen, Lee (2020-10-20). "Russia Has Cosmonauts So Arab Spacemen Want Najmonauts" . ViralTab . Retrieved 2023-05-16 .
^ "Muslim Astronaut Posts Stunning Video of Mecca From Space" . Futurism . Retrieved 2023-05-17 .
^ "Emirati astronaut Nora Al Matrooshi: First Arab 'space girl' set for orbital mission" . gulfnews.com . 2021-04-11. Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ Nasir, Sarwat (2021-07-07). "Dubai Police pilot turned astronaut sets sights on the Moon" . The National . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ a b "Astronaut Biography: Salman Al-Saud" . spacefacts.de .
^ "Johnson Space Center Home" . 11 February 2015.
^ "Al-Saud" . astronautix.com . Archived from the original on 2 April 2016.
^ a b "Cosmonaut Biography: Muhammed Faris" . spacefacts.de .
^ "Фарис Мухаммед Ахмед" . warheroes.ru .
^ "Faris" . astronautix.com . Archived from the original on 4 March 2016.
^ "From Sultan AlNeyadi to Hazzaa AlMansoori; meet the 'Najmonaut's of the Arab world" . me.mashable.com . 2023-03-03. Retrieved 2023-05-16 .
^ "UAE's Sultan AlNeyadi now a 'najmonaut': Meet the 4 Arabs in this elite circle of space explorers" . MSN . Retrieved 2023-05-16 .
^ "How the UAE has set its sights on space" . The Week . Retrieved 2023-05-16 .
^ DUNN, MARCIA (2023-05-31). "Private flight with 2 Saudi astronauts returns from space station with Gulf of Mexico splashdown" . Chron . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "Private astronaut crew, including first Arab woman in orbit, returns from space station" . MSN . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "SpaceX capsule splashes down in Gulf of Mexico" . USA TODAY . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "Saudi, US astronauts splash down on return from space station" . MSN . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "First Arab female astronaut arrives at ISS" . MSN . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "Astronaut Team Comprising First Arab Woman In Orbit Returns From Space Station" .
^ "Private astronaut crew, including first Arab woman in orbit, heads for splashdown" . MSN . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "Private astronaut crew, including first Arab woman in orbit, return from space station" . The Straits Times . 2023-05-31. ISSN 0585-3923 . Retrieved 2023-06-01 .
^ "UAE in space: UAE Mission 1 a revered milestone in nation's space exploration goals" . gulfnews.com . Retrieved 20 January 2020 .
^ "Schools invited to pitch for space project for UAE astronauts" . gulfnews.com .
^ "Science in Space – Push the boundaries and send your experiment to space" .
^ "Hazzaa Ali AlMansoori | Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Centre - MBRSC -UAE" . Mbrsc.ae. Retrieved 2022-02-22 .
^ "The first Syrian in space" . 9 April 2015 – via The National.
^ "Swedish-Israeli NASA astronaut Jessica Meir gets ready for space" . The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com . Retrieved 2021-10-23 .
^ "My father's journey began here in Baghdad, his birthplace and home to Meirs for many years. Goodnight Baghdad! #TheJourney #GoodnightFromSpace" . twitter.com . Retrieved 20 January 2020 .
^ "NASA Astronaut Meir Sends Special Message from Space to Hope Bus Children in Baghdad" . iraqichildren.org/ . Retrieved 20 January 2020 .
^ A prince in space Archived May 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine at Saudi Aramco World , January/February 1986, p20-29
^ El-Maghraby, Tamer (19 March 2007). "Eight Muslims in Space and Counting" . IslamOnline.net . Retrieved March 26, 2010 . [permanent dead link ]
^ Flynn, Abigail. "Alumna Astronaut Sara Sabry Becomes First Egyptian to Reach Space" . The American University in Cairo . American University in Cairo. Retrieved 28 September 2024 .
^ Wall, Mike. "Saudi Arabia's 1st female astronaut hopes kids follow in her footsteps" . Space.com . Future US, Inc.