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The first woman to fly to the moon will be Christina Hammock Koch, as NASA announced in April 2023. She studied electrical engineering and physics and was selected for the 21st NASA astronaut class in 2013. In 2019, Koch flew to the ISS and spent 328 days in space, setting a record for the longest time spent in space by a woman.  During her time on the ISS, she conducted the first all-female space walk with her colleague Jessica Weir and contributed to hundreds of experiments, for example testing 3D tissue bioprinting in microgravity. On the Artemis II moon mission, Christina and her colleagues won’t land on the moon – instead they’ll orbit it to pave the way for future moon missions. Technologist of the Year 2023 was awarded to Mary Hor-Lao, a Director of Engineering in Abbott's Neuromodulation division. The company develops medical devices that help people with chronic pain.  Hor-Lao led the development of the world’s smallest rechargeable implantable pulse generator. This tiny device is surgically placed in the body along with thin wires that send out mild electrical pulses to the nerves along the spinal cord, which helps reduce pain.  Hor-Lao survived the Khmer Rouge genocide in the 1970s, which claimed the livesof up to up to three million people. As a STEM mentor, Hor-Lao supports children in her native Cambodia. Biochemist Katalin Kariko won a Nobel Prize in 2023 for her research on mRNA vacc1nes, which helped make it possible to develop a C0V1D-19 vacc1nes so quickly. In living cells, genetic information is encoded in DNA. It’s like a blueprint for an organism. This genetic code needs to be “rewritten” into another form to make it readable: messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA then serves as a template for protein production by the cell’s organelles. mRNA vacc1nes work by triggering the production of proteins that stimulate the formation of v1rus-blocking antibodies in our cells.  Kariko’s research was fundamental to the development of mRNA vacc1es. #sciencetok #science #stunnagirl #ichooseyou #womeninstem #LearnOnTikTok #nobelprize #womenintech #stunna #dwscience
The first woman to fly to the moon will be Christina Hammock Koch, as NASA announced in April 2023. She studied electrical engineering and physics and was selected for the 21st NASA astronaut class in 2013. In 2019, Koch flew to the ISS and spent 328 days in space, setting a record for the longest time spent in space by a woman. During her time on the ISS, she conducted the first all-female space walk with her colleague Jessica Weir and contributed to hundreds of experiments, for example testing 3D tissue bioprinting in microgravity. On the Artemis II moon mission, Christina and her colleagues won’t land on the moon – instead they’ll orbit it to pave the way for future moon missions. Technologist of the Year 2023 was awarded to Mary Hor-Lao, a Director of Engineering in Abbott's Neuromodulation division. The company develops medical devices that help people with chronic pain. Hor-Lao led the development of the world’s smallest rechargeable implantable pulse generator. This tiny device is surgically placed in the body along with thin wires that send out mild electrical pulses to the nerves along the spinal cord, which helps reduce pain. Hor-Lao survived the Khmer Rouge genocide in the 1970s, which claimed the livesof up to up to three million people. As a STEM mentor, Hor-Lao supports children in her native Cambodia. Biochemist Katalin Kariko won a Nobel Prize in 2023 for her research on mRNA vacc1nes, which helped make it possible to develop a C0V1D-19 vacc1nes so quickly. In living cells, genetic information is encoded in DNA. It’s like a blueprint for an organism. This genetic code needs to be “rewritten” into another form to make it readable: messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA then serves as a template for protein production by the cell’s organelles. mRNA vacc1nes work by triggering the production of proteins that stimulate the formation of v1rus-blocking antibodies in our cells. Kariko’s research was fundamental to the development of mRNA vacc1es. #sciencetok #science #stunnagirl #ichooseyou #womeninstem #LearnOnTikTok #nobelprize #womenintech #stunna #dwscience

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