Jennifer "Jenni" Anne MacKinnon Sidey-Gibbons (born 3 August 1988) is a Canadian astronaut, engineer, and academic. She was selected by the Canadian Space Agency (CSA) as one of the two members of the 2017 CSA Group alongside Joshua Kutryk. In 2023, CSA assigned her to be Jeremy Hansen's backup for the Artemis II lunar flyby mission. As of the 2023 CSA Artemis announcement, she uses her married name, Jenni Gibbons.[1]
In 2015, she completed a PhD in engineering at Jesus College, Cambridge. Her doctoral research, supervised by Professor Nondas Mastorakos, focused on combustion processes.[2]
Academic career
Before joining the CSA, Gibbons was a lecturer in internal combustion engines at the Department of Engineering at the University of Cambridge. Her research centered on turbulent flame dynamics and pollutant reduction in combustion systems.[4] She also taught undergraduate and graduate students in the Energy, Fluid Mechanics, and Turbomachinery Division on topics such as energy production, thermodynamics, and flame physics.[citation needed]
Gibbons was selected by the CSA in 2017 as part of its fourth astronaut recruitment campaign, joining Joshua Kutryk in the 2017 CSA Group.[5][6] She was the third female astronaut candidate chosen by the CSA, following Roberta Bondar and Julie Payette. At 28 years old, she became the youngest astronaut candidate ever selected by the agency.[7]
On 22 November 2023, during a public ceremony at CSA headquarters, Gibbons was announced as the backup for Jeremy Hansen on the Artemis II mission. The mission, part of NASA's Artemis program, is slated to fly no earlier than April 2026.[8][9][10]
^ abSidey, J. A. M. (2015). Experimental and numerical investigations of highly preheated and diluted flames (PhD thesis). University of Cambridge. OCLC1064667170.
^ ab"Biography of Jenni Gibbons". Canadian Space Agency. Ottawa: King's Printer for Canada. 22 November 2023. Archived from the original on 22 November 2023. Retrieved 22 November 2023.