Starmus

STARMUS VI

50 Years on Mars

September 5-10, 2022

Yerevan, Armenia

50 Years on Mars: From Mars 3 and Mariner 9 to Starship

All Starmus festivals were unique and amazing. Starmus Advisory Board tried to do everything for the 6th festival in Armenia to be historic and memorable. In addition to the lectures and discussions the festival has featured two concerts. STARMUS co-founder, Queen guitarist Brian May deliver five performances. Brian May and System of a Down frontman Serj Tankian, together with a choir, have performed Queen’s The Show Must Go On. During the musical part of the festival a special tribute will be paid to the late duduk master Jivan Gasparyan. STARMUS VI festival featured presentations by legendary Astronauts, Nobel Prize Winners, prominent figures of science, technology, culture and arts. An emotional concert moment arrived for many when the Children’s Choir of the Archdiocese of Tavush, Armenia, sang a medley of Queen songs.A confluence of science and music, Starmus (stars, music) has evolved into the most incredible celebration of science on the planet. In an era of darkness around the world, of wars, the politics of greed and lust to hold onto power, and an existence too often driven by self-centeredness, we need science and music to give us hope for a better future.

A souvenir sheet with one postage stamp dedicated to the theme Starmus 6th International Festival in Yerevan was put into circulation.  The postage stamp of the souvenir sheet with the nominal value of 500 AMD depicts the logotype of “STARMUS VI. 50 years of Mars” International Festival and the right part of the souvenir sheet depicts Mars. There was a special  ceremony of naming Yerevan’s N170 High School after world-renowned Armenian engineer Alexander Kemurdzhian. Alexander Kemurdzhian headed the team assigned to develop the chassis for the Lunokhod (Moonwalker) program. His team designed both Lunokhod 1(1970) and Lunokhod 2 (1973). With speakers including the moonwalker from Apollo 16, the ‘father of the iPod’ Tony Fadell, scientists from NASA and SpaceX, Nobel laureates, and world-famous

musicians, the Starmus festival’s organisers hope it will have long-lasting impacts in Armenia. Yerevan´s Freedom square was  covered in futuristic pavilions, crowds of visitors have been looking to the stars as the Starmus international science festival took over the city centre. More than 80.000 people joined the City Program of Yerevan. Attendees and organisers alike hope that the impacts of the festival will reach beyond its closing date and drive the development of Armenia’s science and tech scene.

Covering themes of life in the universe, Nobel Prize winning chemist Jack Szostak outlined the origin of life on Earth; Richard Dawkins described evolution and exobiology; astronomer Michel Mayor recalled extrasolar planets including his own first discovery; and Jill Tarter explored extraterrestrial intelligence in the universe.

SPEAKERS