The U.S. military may have some of the world's most sophisticated communica- tions networks, but when it came to cadets at the U.S. Military Academy talking with astronaut and West Point alumnus Col. Drew Morgan aboard the International Space Station, the preferred method was via ham radio.
The October contact
between the U.S. Military Academy Amateur Radio Club, W2KGY, and Morgan, KI5AAA
(operating as NA1SS) was organized through the Amateur Radio on the
International Space Station (ARISS) program. The ground end of the contact was
overseen by Col. Stephen Hamilton, KJ5HY, a research scientist at the Army
Cyber Institute at West Point and
Officer-in-Charge of the ham radio club, which has held W2KGY since 1937.
West
Point Cadet Easton Bolin talks via ham radio with Col. Drew Morgan, KI5AAA, operating NA1SS aboard the International Space Station. (US Army photo by Brandon O'Connor) |
Morgan is a 1998 West Point graduate, according to the Defense Visual
Information Distribution Service, and answered questions from cadets during the
brief 10-minute orbital "window" about the Army's role in space
operations and how he works through challenges on board the space station.
"The things that
have gotten me through the tough times," he told them, "is thinking
about serving something bigger than myself … The thing that motivates me is
knowing that I've been serving my country since I showed up at West Point as an 18-year-old."
According to Hamilton, this was the second ARISS contact from West
Point, but the first using West Point
equipment. The prior contact, he said, was in 2007.