Samantha Cristoforetti, from Milan, Italy.
Alexander Gerst, from Künzelsau, Germany.
Andreas Mogensen, from Copenhagen, Denmark.
Luca Parmitano, from Paternò, Italy.
Timothy Peake, from Chichester, UK.
Thomas Pesquet, from Rouen, France.
"I am very happy that our new colleagues reported to EAC in Cologne to start their training. The taking-up duty of the new class of ESA astronaut marks our commitment to a future important role for Europe in human spaceflight," said Simonetta Di Pippo, ESA's Director of Human Spaceflight. "We are already flying an average of two ESA astronauts every year to the ISS. In 2010, ESA astronaut Roberto Vittori will fly to the ISS in July to deliver the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer and ESA astronaut Paolo Nespoli will fly in November to work on the ISS for six months.
Basic training for the European astronauts will take place mostly at the European Astronaut Centre (EAC), where they will follow a training programme developed by EAC according to international specifications agreed between the International Space Station (ISS) partners.
"It is not enough to be a good scientist or an excellent engineer to become an astronaut; the 18-month basic training at EAC will bring the new astronauts to a professional level in various fields, including Russian, fundamentals of several scientific disciplines, history of spaceflight, space engineering, human behaviour, flight training and other essential parts of the astronaut job. This will enable them to be trained to carry out complex tasks during space missions," said Michel Tognini, Head of EAC.
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