Shawna Pandya is a Canadian citizen-scientist astronaut of Indian-origin
@Citizen-scientist Astronaut, Timeline and Family
Shawna Pandya is a Canadian citizen-scientist astronaut of Indian-origin
Shawna Pandya born at
Shawna Pandya was born in Brandon, Manitoba, Canada to parents of Indian ethnicity who hailed from Mumbai, Maharashtra. She was raised with her brother in Alberta.
As a student she worked hard to score excellent grades in mathematics and science. Though she preferred studying mainly science, she did equally well in languages and history in school.
Everything intrigued her as a child, and knowledge had no limits according to her. She wanted to grow up and explore beyond the skies so she kept reading and learning.
As she stepped into her teens, she began dreaming of becoming an astronaut. After graduating from high school, she sought admission at the ‘University of Alberta’ in the field of neuroscience.
After completing her degree in Honors Neuroscience, she decided to do her MD and also take up the ‘International Space University Masters Program’.
Before pursuing the citizen-astronaut course, she worked in the Crew Medical Support Office at the ‘European Astronaut Centre’ in Germany.
She also conducted a series of tests on the ‘neuroArm’, which is a robot designed to perform neurosurgery at the ‘University of Calgary’. With her constant yearning to explore space, she founded the ‘University of Alberta Faculty of Space Medicine (now Extreme Medicine) Club.
She has also helped develop and organise ‘Students for the Exploration and Development of Space- Canada’ also known as SEDS-Canada, as the Vice President of Research and Development.
During the initial years of her career, Shawna exhibited great interest in various domains of search especially in the field of medicine and space. She has also presented papers on telemedicine and is keen on researching space medicine and enhancing technology for healthcare.
In 2016, she got the opportunity to work and train as a citizen-scientist astronaut candidate under two major projects – Polar Suborbital Science of the Upper Mesosphere (PoSSUM) and Physiological, Health and Environmental Observations in Microgravity (PHEnOM).
In 2016, she also began training for the ‘Poseidon’ project as a member of the aquanaut crew. The program is a 100 day underwater sea reach exploration. Project Poseidon will commence in the year 2018.
At ‘PoSSUM’ her goal is to study noctilucent cloud formation and also its composition by the means of suborbital flight. For ‘PHEnOM’ she will focus on studies pertaining to human physiology and performance measures at the laboratory in both- microgravity and suborbital flight.
Though both these missions do not require any space exploration but with projects she will have to pass the 100 km Karmen line, which is the outer space defining boundary and hence will be acknowledged as an astronaut.
Owing to her vast knowledge and impressionable career graph, she has also taken up motivational speaking. Apart from being a lecturer at the University of Alberta, she also visits schools and colleges globally to motivate students and open avenues in the world of medicine and science for them.