 Oskar Romeo 4 India Sierra Sierra Oskar Romeo 4 India Sierra Sierra 4U1 WRC, 4U1 Whisky Romeo Charlie calling Hello, it is Ginny, you are calling you You are five and seven at the IT headquarters during the WRC 15 meetings where more than 3600 delegates from 160 countries are watching you. Oskar Romeo 4 India Sierra Sierra 4U1 Whisky Romeo Charlie over. I'm excited to be talking with you with our camera radio asset. Excellent, can we proceed with the questions from the students over? It would be terrific, and I suppose myself and Ginny others here would be in the questions over. Let's go. Hello, my name is Alcindor Lombardini. My question is, what emotion do you feel in space when talking to somebody on Earth? Alcindor, I'll answer this one. I'm delighted to be able to talk with people on the ground whether it's using our internet protocol code so it's easier to communicate with family and with people that are interested in space on the ground is a terrific event always and we love to share the excitement and enthusiasm that we have for being up here on the space station. Over to you. Hello, my name is Hannah and my question is, what are the typical school subjects covered by your researchers at the moment over? It is amazing what my primary and university and graduate school experience is how those have prepared me for life up here on the space station. Our research covers the broad spectrum of physics and biology and even geography and geology. All of those have contributed to our understanding of the research that we're doing up here which includes life sciences, we're studying the heart, bones, muscles and eyes in terms of physics, we're studying combustion and not only our research but just in our everyday life we can see how the various subjects that we've studied come into play. Just being in this weightless environment we can see Newton's laws of motion and it's pretty exciting. Thanks for the great question. Over. Hello, my name is Maxim or this is my question. Are your dreams different when you're on the ISS compared on Earth? Over. Thank you for this question. Yes, that is quite different. When I was here, we were here to dream on the space station without gravity, but now we are spending, I mean, living in ISS for more than 100 years, 100 days. So now I'm dreaming about living in ISS without gravity about 50%. My dream is orbit without gravity, 50%. Actually, I'm still living on Earth with gravity and doing normal stuff on the ground. Thank you for the good question. OK, we congratulate you also to the 15 years anniversary of presence of human on the ISS and can we have one more question to you? Please, thank you for the congratulations. It's amazing as a crew to be a part of this long legacy having 15 inhabitants at the space station for 15 years to do science that benefits not only our understanding of the universe but to benefit the Earth as well. My name is Julie and I'm the deputy head of the U.S. delegation here and I'd like to know why the radio spectrum is important to you. Julie, thank you for that great question and thank you so much for representing the U.S. at this conference. The radio spectrum is incredibly important not only for what we're doing right now the ability to communicate between the space station and Earth but just the management of the radio spectrum so that we can accommodate the communications that are required for aircraft, for business communications, for cell phone communications, all those things that I think many of us take for granted requires oversight and regulation in order to make it efficient. We almost do it like this. Thank you very much. We wish you a lot of success for the whole crew on the ISS and I think that the U.S. will be over. That's why Oscar Romeo for India, for Iwan Whisky, Romeo Charlie, 73, goodbye. 73, goodbye.