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ATV-3: Edoardo Amaldi
 
ESA's ATV3 is steadily coming together in Bremen
ATV-3's cargo carrier
 
3 March 2010
The third ATV, to be launched to the ISS in early 2012, is named after famous Italian physicist and spaceflight pioneer Edoardo Amaldi.
 
The Italian space agency, ASI, proposed naming ATV-3 after the Italian physicist Edoardo Amaldi (5 September 1908 – 5 December 1989).

"He started working in nuclear physics with Enrico Fermi, did pioneering work in the field of cosmic rays and in the new field of particle physics, becoming an Italian reference character in nuclear science," said Enrico Saggese, President of ASI.

"Amaldi was one of the few who in the post-war years prompted action ultimately leading to the founding of ESRO, and later ESA."  
 
Edoardo Amaldi (1908-1989)
Edoardo Amaldi (1908-89)
Father of Italian space research
 
Edoardo Amaldi was a leading figure in Italian science in the 20th century, particularly in fundamental experimental physics.

In Rome, in the 1930s, Amaldi was a member of a group of young Italian scientists: the Via Panisperna boys (“I ragazzi di Via Panisperna”), who, led by Enrico Fermi, made the famous discovery of slow neutrons which later made possible the nuclear reactor.

He contributed to nuclear physics in the 1930s and 1940s and to cosmic rays and particle physics afterwards.

He then became a pioneer in the experimental search for gravitational waves in the 1970s.

It is largely thanks to his drive that Italian physics emerged from the slump following the Second World War.

Amaldi’s concern for peace, and his strong feeling for the responsible role that the scientific community should play in this respect, was always a natural complement to his unshakeable belief in the open nature of science and the need for international cooperation.
 
 
ESA's ATV3 is steadily coming together in Bremen
ATV-3's avionics bay being delivered
"Italy is a key European country in our participation to the International Space Station partnership. By naming the ATV-3 after Edoardo Amaldi we celebrate a great Italian, but also a committed European who understood the importance of pooling resources and minds together to achieve important results”, said Simonetta Di Pippo, ESA Director for Human Spaceflight.

“We are paying tribute to a visionary mind, to a great scientist but also to an idea of cooperation that is also embodied in the International Space Station partnership.
 
 
"The ATV is the first recurring production of an exploration spacecraft and places Europe a step closer to our partners. I am glad that Italy is taking so much pride in their participation in the ISS which is a recognition of their human and industrial capabilities."
 
 

 


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