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Paolo Amoroso
Paolo Amoroso
@amoroso@oldbytes.space  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

On February 5, 2015 I attended an ARISS radio contact of an Italian school with ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti on the International Space Station.

As a space enthuasiast the first student to ask a question to Cristoforetti, Elena Selmi, was thrilled at the opportunity to talk that day, her 13th birthday, with the first Italian woman in space. Which left Selmi stunned and speechless when Cristoforetti, before answering, wished her happy birthday from space.

Selmi eventually graduated in physics at Oxford and now works on the Bepi Colombo ESA mission to Mercury. At 24 she is the youngest Young Graduate Trainee staff member at ESA's European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC) near Madrid. This ARISS article tells the full story in English (text in the second post of this thread).

https://www.ariss.org

The AstronautiCAST space podcast I co-host interviewed Selmi in Italian:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gm85aAhv0ww

This article in Italian I wrote that day in 2015 has a photo of Selmi and a video of the ARISS contact:

https://www.astronautinews.it/2015/02/samantha-cristoforetti-contatto-radio-con-gli-studenti-milanesi

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#ariss #iss #space #AstroSamantha #astronaut

A screenshot of an article on the https://www.ariss.org website The article has three photos that show a woman outdoor in front of the entrance of a research center, the same woman at school when she was 13, and a woman astronaut on the International Space Station. The full text of the article is in the first comment to this post (too long for ALT text).
A screenshot of an article on the https://www.ariss.org website The article has three photos that show a woman outdoor in front of the entrance of a research center, the same woman at school when she was 13, and a woman astronaut on the International Space Station. The full text of the article is in the first comment to this post (too long for ALT text).
A screenshot of an article on the https://www.ariss.org website The article has three photos that show a woman outdoor in front of the entrance of a research center, the same woman at school when she was 13, and a woman astronaut on the International Space Station. The full text of the article is in the first comment to this post (too long for ALT text).
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Joe Pasqua
Joe Pasqua
@bitsplusatoms@mastodon.social  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

@amoroso this is so cool! What a wonderful outcome.

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Paolo Amoroso
Paolo Amoroso
@amoroso@oldbytes.space  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

@cosmos4u @bitsplusatoms You may be interested in this story.

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Paolo Amoroso
Paolo Amoroso
@amoroso@oldbytes.space  ·  activity timestamp 2 weeks ago

The text of the ARISS article:

https://www.ariss.org

ARISS Contact Sets Path to the Stars

February 5, 2026— On this day in 2015, thirteen-year-old Elena Selmi of the Locatelli-Oriani secondary school in Milan, Italy, had an other-worldly experience, one that stuck with her.

Elena was the first student to ask a question of ESA astronaut Samantha Cristoforetti during a pre-arranged ARISS contact with the ISS. Our volunteers in Milan, Micol Ivancic (IU2LXR) and Gianpietro Ferrario (IZ2GOJ) were the ARISS Educator (who worked with this school on STEM lessons prior to their ARISS contact) and the ARISS Technical Mentor for the contact, respectively.

​Recently, Elena reached out to Cristoforetti to let her know how much just one question and answer—lasting less than one minute—changed her life.

Ciao Samantha!
You probably won't remember, but in February 2015, during your first mission on the ISS, you contacted two schools in Milan via the ARISS-AMSAT amateur radio initiative... and wished a happy birthday to a little girl named Elena. I'm writing to you because I wanted to tell you that little girl is me!

I graduated from Oxford with a degree in astrophysics and particle physics last summer, and now I work at ESA! I'm the youngest staff member (as YGT) at ESAC in Spain, and I think at the entire agency; I'm part of the BepiColombo mission, which will arrive at Mercury in September. Next week will be the 11th anniversary of that birthday (I'm turning 24!), and for the first time I told this story to my team. I've always kept it very close—it's one of the fondest memories I have—but my managers suggested I try contacting you on Teams.

If you see this message, I just wanted to say THANK YOU! Maybe you'll be happy to know that something so small had such a big impact.

Cristoforetti did see the message and reached out to ARISS--and we both congratulate Elena on her “mission” success! We look forward to having the same effect on the thousands of students we connect with the ISS and increasingly, with human commercial space vehicles around the earth and on the way to the moon and mars.
​
We are currently in the middle of another application window for schools through February 27. Proposal information and more details such as expectations, proposal guidelines and the proposal form can be found at www.ariss.org.
Also, an informational webinar session will be held on February 5, 2026, at 8 PM ET. The Zoom link to sign up is: https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/hijg24mPRK69uGC0gUq8zw

For the latest updates on school contacts and other exciting ARISS news, please check out and follow our ARISS Facebook, X, Instagram, BlueSky, Mastodon, LinkedIn, YouTube and Discord social media channels.

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