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by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Dec 15, 2014
Swiss watchmaker Omega has announced a new version of its historic space watch, tested and qualified with ESA's help and drawing on an invention of ESA astronaut Jean-Francois Clervoy. Jean-Francois flew in space three times in the 1990s and began thinking how to improve the wristwatches he wore on his missions. ESA filed a patent based on his ideas for a timepiece that helps astronauts to track their mission events. One of the new functions allows the wearer to set a date in the past or future down to the second and have the watch calculate how much time has elapsed or is left. Other features useful for astronauts include flexible programming of multiple alarms with different ring tones. The Omega company, with its strong links to spaceflight since the first Moon landings in the 1960s, was interested in improving its line of Speedmaster Professional watches, and called on ESA's patent for the new Speedmaster Skywalker X-33.
Testing the new watch The timepiece proved itself capable of surviving anything an astronaut might experience - and more. First, it displayed ruggedness by surviving ESTEC's shaker simulating the intense vibrations of a launch. Then it was spun in a centrifuge to reach seven times the gravity we feel on Earth, just like an astronaut might endure when returning to our planet. The next step was to analyse its performance after sitting in a vacuum chamber with temperatures ranging from -45 C to +75 C, a far greater range than an astronaut would ever have to endure. Finally, the watch was blasted with radiation in Sweden under supervision by France's ONERA/DESP aerospace centre to simulate space radiation. Each watch was inspected visually and its functions were reviewed before and after each test.
Ready for spaceflight President of Omega, Stephen Urquhart, said: "We are delighted that our friends at the European Space Agency have tested and qualified the Speedmaster Skywalker X-33 for all its piloted missions, which is a natural extension of our long relationship with NASA and its space programme. "ESA's abilities and ambitions are extraordinary, as demonstrated by their recent high-profile successes with Rosetta and Philae, and we are proud that their name and endorsement grace the back of this iconic chronograph." Jean-Francois Clervoy concludes: "I am excited and proud to see my invention implemented in a high-precision wristwatch. "Having Omega in this partnership with ESA, based on our patent, will allow all ESA astronauts to benefit from its innovative functions." This invention, owned and protected by ESA, is one of 135 available for commercialisation by non-space industry. Note: ESA is an intergovernmental organisation and is not involved in the manufacturing or commercialisation of the Omega Skywalker X-33.
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