Villa Parco Bolasco apre le sue porte a Dance Well

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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A partire da gennaio 2022 Villa Parco Bolasco, nel cuore di Castelfranco Veneto, entrerà a far parte della rete Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson, un progetto promosso da Villa Parco Bolasco, Università di Padova e UniPadova sostenibile insieme al CSC di Bassano del Grappa in collaborazione con il Comune di Castelfranco Veneto, Ulss 2 Marca Trevigiana e Varcities.

La Dance Well – Ricerca e movimento per il Parkinson è una pratica di danza rivolta principalmente, ma non esclusivamente, a persone che vivono con il Parkinson. Una delle sue caratteristiche fondamentali è quella di svolgersi sempre all’interno di spazi significativi dal punto di vista culturale (musei, parchi, ville ecc.) che entrano in dialogo con il processo artistico, distinguendo così Dance Well dalle pratiche tradizionali in sale di danza, palestre o spazi per la riabilitazione in senso stretto.

La Dance Well è una pratica innovativa, che integra strategie riabilitative, esercizio aerobico, immaginazione motoria, tecniche di cueing, training propriocettivo e sensitivo-motorio, andando a incidere positivamente sui sintomi e sulla qualità della vita dei partecipanti. Attraverso la pratica continua di Dance Well è possibile raggiungere una migliore qualità della vita, migliorare il senso del ritmo, dell'equilibrio e del movimento, sviluppare relazioni interpersonali per superare l'isolamento che spesso accompagna la malattia, stimolare la propria creatività ed esplorare nuove forme di espressione, entrando al contempo in profonda connessione con i luoghi in cui si svolge l’attività.

A Castelfranco Veneto sarà la Sala delle feste di Villa Parco Bolasco, ad ospitare ogni lunedì pomeriggio dalle 16 alle 17, a partire dal 17 gennaio 2022, i nuovi dancers e i loro teachersLa pratica Dance Well è gratuita e aperta a chiunque, senza limitazioni di età e condizione psicofisica.

Le lezioni (classi) sono condotte da Dance Well Teachers certificati, liberi di proporre ai partecipanti (dancers) diversi approcci, tecniche e stili, che si concentrano sullo sviluppo delle abilità espressive per la danza. Per quanto dedicata primariamente a persone malate di Parkinson, Dance Well è una forma di espressione artistica che può essere praticata a tutte le età e a prescindere dalla condizione fisica, tanto da essere già stata sperimentata con successo in gruppi composti anche da famiglie, caregiver, over 60, persone con ridotta mobilità, ed essere divenuta parte di progetti che coinvolgono le scuole secondarie.

Per partecipare alle classi è necessario iscriversi tramite e-mail  - comunicazionefestival@comune.bassano.vi.it - o telefono (0424 519804) ed essere in possesso del Green Pass rafforzato.

L’Università di Padova è anche partner del progetto europeo Visionary Nature Based Actions For Health, Wellbeing & Resilience In Cities (Varcities), finanziato nell’ambito del Programma quadro europeo per la ricerca e l’innovazione Horizon 2020, che ha come obiettivo quello di diffondere un nuovo modello di città vivibile, accogliente e attenta alla salute e al benessere dei propri abitanti. Castelfranco Veneto è l’unica italiana tra le otto città-pilota protagoniste del progetto.

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2021N43 - Esito colloquio

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The role of Unipd in space debris mitigation

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

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Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Addressing issues related to the increasing amount of orbital debris is critical for the long-term sustainable utilization of circumterrestrial space.

About 35,000 pieces of large debris (defined as 10 cm across or greater) orbit the earth. The US Space Command (formerly known as NORAD) catalogs and tracks about 28,000 of these large pieces daily. Less than 3,500 are functioning satellites, and the rest are untraceable nonfunctioning satellites. All debris, even those only a few centimeters in diameter holds enough kinetic energy to knock out a satellite from an impact. Such an impact could deteriorate the essential functions of satellites such as telecommunications, earth observation, navigation, weather forecasts, and more.

Analytical models show that we must remove and avoid leaving large pieces of debris in orbit for too long, as debris of this size causes the great threat of fragmentation if they experience an orbital impact. Deorbiting a satellite is a problem. The present technology available to deorbit a satellite consumes a considerable amount of chemical propellant, and, as we know, there are no refueling stations in space!   

One solution is to create a deorbiting system with an auxiliary energy source that consumes less propellant or, at least very little. Such as system could deorbit a satellite over a relatively short period and drastically reduce the risk of impact with other orbiting objects.

The University of Padua’s role began in the 1970s with the development of a wire cable satellite tethering system thanks to Professor Giuseppe Colombo and Mario Grossi of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge (Massachusetts, USA). The wire cable or tether systemuses electrodynamic propulsion to produce the thrust necessary to modify the orbital height without a chemical propellant. 

The University continues its role in this technological growth by participating in two projects funded by the European Commission: the BETs project of the FP7 program and now the ETPACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program. The ETPACK project coordinated by the Universidad Carlos III de Madrid collaborated with the University of Padua, the Technical University of Dresden, the German Fraunhöfer Institute (IKTS), and SENER, a Spanish company the specialized in Aerospace Engineering and Advanced Thermal Devices.

Enrico Lorenzini, Professor in the Industrial Engineering Department of the University of Padua and Research Group Coordinator explains,

“Our project aims to develop and construct an advanced prototype of 12 Units (12U CubeSat) measuring 22cm x 22cm x 34cm and to ground test the program to verify its functionality in orbit. The University of Padua research group role, specifically that of CISAS-UniPD, concerns the most delicate parts of a CubeSat, which is the CubeSat Deployer System, which is designed to deploy 500 meters of a thin conductive ribbon in orbits following a precise velocity profile and without damaging the delicate ribbon itself.”

The research group including Andrea Valmorbida, Giulia Sarego, Alice Brunello, Lorenzo Olivieri, Giacomo Colombatti, Carlo Bettanini and Marco Pertile recently carried out a functional test of the conductor tape successfully. The group presented their results on December 10 to the European Commission, receiving a very positive feedback from experts; the ETPACK project is in first place of "Featured Projects” presented on the European Innovation Council website https://eic.ec.europa.eu/index_en.

The team anticipates further development of projects with new funding, for which the team has already submitted its proposal, from the Horizon Europe program.  Projects include a demonstration flight of the deorbiting system (In-Orbit Demonstration) in 2025. After the necessary changes to the current prototype, the updated project brings it to the final qualification for orbital flight, the ETPACK team is eager to see the performance of this very innovative system, first pioneered thanks to Mario Grossi and Giuseppe Colombo.

[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_date_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-17T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) ) [field_etichetta_box_lancio_news] => Array ( ) [field_img_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101885 [uid] => 2032 [filename] => Senza titolo_6.png [uri] => public://Senza titolo_6_0.png [filemime] => image/png [filesize] => 222716 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639740431 [type] => image [field_file_image_alt_text] => Array ( ) [field_file_image_title_text] => Array ( ) [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2048 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( [height] => 227 [width] => 677 ) [height] => 227 [width] => 677 [alt] => space [title] => ) ) ) [field_link_alla_news] => Array ( ) [field_link_esterno_news] => Array ( ) [field_pagina_associata] => Array ( ) [field_link_etichetta] => Array ( ) [field_abstract_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Being involved in projects that mitigate space debris has always been a priority for the University of Padua. Today, the University upholds its role by participating in two European Commission funded projects: the BETs project and the E.T.PACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program [format] => [safe_value] => Being involved in projects that mitigate space debris has always been a priority for the University of Padua. Today, the University upholds its role by participating in two European Commission funded projects: the BETs project and the E.T.PACK project of the H2020 FET-OPEN (Future & Emerging Technologies) program ) ) ) [field_allegato_news] => Array ( ) [field_categorie_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2296 ) ) ) [field_pub_date] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-17T00:00:00 [value2] => 2022-12-17T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) ) [field_layout_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => single ) ) ) [field_testo_opzionale_news] => Array ( ) [field_url_en_page] => Array ( ) [field_url_en_page_label] => Array ( ) [path] => Array ( [pathauto] => 1 ) [name] => francesca.forzan [picture] => 0 [data] => b:0; [num_revisions] => 3 [current_revision_id] => 379157 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-17T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) [#formatter] => date_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => Ven, 17/12/2021 ) ) )

2021N53 - Decreto nomina Commissione giudicatrice (D.D.G. n.4448/2021 del 3/12/2021)

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2021N54 - Decreto nomina Commissione giudicatrice (D.D.G. n.4452/2021 del 3/12/2021)

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2021N32 - Decreto nomina Commissione giudicatrice (D.D.G. n.4393/2021 del 1/12/2021)

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Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca

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Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
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Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_accordion_state] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => chiuso ) ) ) [field_allegato_element] => Array ( ) [field_outline_level] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => h3 ) ) ) [field_titolo_frontend] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [format] => [safe_value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) ) [name] => stefano.zampieri [picture] => 0 [data] => a:2:{s:13:"form_build_id";s:48:"form-WsCySmos4vAVlyFhG6gU5T7knfAyqco8LxlocSU_yIA";s:14:"wysiwyg_status";a:1:{i:1;i:1;}} [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377823 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [format] => [safe_value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) [#formatter] => text_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) [body] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => -3 [#title] => Body [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => hidden [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => body [#field_type] => text_with_summary [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => elemento_accordion [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377823 [uid] => 32 [title] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84845 [type] => elemento_accordion [language] => it [created] => 1639736721 [changed] => 1741596921 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1741596921 [revision_uid] => 4 [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_accordion_state] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => chiuso ) ) ) [field_allegato_element] => Array ( ) [field_outline_level] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => h3 ) ) ) [field_titolo_frontend] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [format] => [safe_value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) ) [name] => stefano.zampieri [picture] => 0 [data] => a:2:{s:13:"form_build_id";s:48:"form-WsCySmos4vAVlyFhG6gU5T7knfAyqco8LxlocSU_yIA";s:14:"wysiwyg_status";a:1:{i:1;i:1;}} [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377823 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[safe_summary] => ) ) [#formatter] => text_summary_or_trimmed [0] => Array ( [#markup] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
) ) [field_accordion_state] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => -1 [#title] => Aperto/Chiuso [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_accordion_state [#field_type] => list_text [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => elemento_accordion [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377823 [uid] => 32 [title] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84845 [type] => elemento_accordion [language] => it [created] => 1639736721 [changed] => 1741596921 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1741596921 [revision_uid] => 4 [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_accordion_state] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => chiuso ) ) ) [field_allegato_element] => Array ( ) [field_outline_level] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => h3 ) ) ) [field_titolo_frontend] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [format] => [safe_value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) ) [name] => stefano.zampieri [picture] => 0 [data] => a:2:{s:13:"form_build_id";s:48:"form-WsCySmos4vAVlyFhG6gU5T7knfAyqco8LxlocSU_yIA";s:14:"wysiwyg_status";a:1:{i:1;i:1;}} [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377823 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => chiuso ) ) [#formatter] => text_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => chiuso ) ) [links] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node [#pre_render] => Array ( [0] => drupal_pre_render_links ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) [node] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node__node [#links] => Array ( [node-readmore] => Array ( [title] => Read more about Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [href] => node/84845 [html] => 1 [attributes] => Array ( [rel] => tag [title] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) ) ) [field_outline_level] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => 31 [#title] => Livello outline [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_outline_level [#field_type] => list_text [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => elemento_accordion [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377823 [uid] => 32 [title] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84845 [type] => elemento_accordion [language] => it [created] => 1639736721 [changed] => 1741596921 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1741596921 [revision_uid] => 4 [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

Michele Maggini – Macroarea 1
Alessandra Rampazzo – Macroarea 2
Enrico Rettore – Macroarea 3

Scadenza: 7 ottobre 2027
[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_accordion_state] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => chiuso ) ) ) [field_allegato_element] => Array ( ) [field_outline_level] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => h3 ) ) ) [field_titolo_frontend] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca [format] => [safe_value] => Commissione per l'integrità della Ricerca ) ) ) [name] => stefano.zampieri [picture] => 0 [data] => a:2:{s:13:"form_build_id";s:48:"form-WsCySmos4vAVlyFhG6gU5T7knfAyqco8LxlocSU_yIA";s:14:"wysiwyg_status";a:1:{i:1;i:1;}} [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377823 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => h3 ) ) [#formatter] => text_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => h3 ) ) )

2021RUB05 Allegato 7 - Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione

Array ( [field_titolo_frontend_all] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => -4 [#title] => Titolo frontend [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_titolo_frontend_all [#field_type] => text_long [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => allegato [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377820 [uid] => 8831 [title] => 2021RUB05 Allegato 7 - Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84844 [type] => allegato [language] => it [created] => 1639735165 [changed] => 1640605992 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1640605992 [revision_uid] => 102 [taxonomy_vocabulary_2] => Array ( ) [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( ) [field_titolo_frontend_all] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione [format] => [safe_value] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione ) ) ) [field_allegato_file] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101878 [uid] => 32 [filename] => verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [uri] => public://2021/verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 991788 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735157 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) ) [name] => carriere.docenti [picture] => 0 [data] => b:0; [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377820 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione [format] => [safe_value] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione ) ) [#formatter] => text_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione ) ) [field_allegato_file] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => -3 [#title] => File [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_allegato_file [#field_type] => file [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => allegato [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377820 [uid] => 8831 [title] => 2021RUB05 Allegato 7 - Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84844 [type] => allegato [language] => it [created] => 1639735165 [changed] => 1640605992 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1640605992 [revision_uid] => 102 [taxonomy_vocabulary_2] => Array ( ) [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( ) [field_titolo_frontend_all] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione [format] => [safe_value] => Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione ) ) ) [field_allegato_file] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101878 [uid] => 32 [filename] => verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [uri] => public://2021/verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 991788 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735157 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) ) [name] => carriere.docenti [picture] => 0 [data] => b:0; [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377820 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101878 [uid] => 32 [filename] => verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [uri] => public://2021/verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 991788 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735157 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) [#formatter] => file_default [0] => Array ( [#theme] => file_link [#file] => stdClass Object ( [fid] => 101878 [uid] => 32 [filename] => verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [uri] => public://2021/verbale 2 MED24 albo.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 991788 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735157 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) ) [links] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node [#pre_render] => Array ( [0] => drupal_pre_render_links ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) [node] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node__node [#links] => Array ( [node-readmore] => Array ( [title] => Read more about 2021RUB05 Allegato 7 - Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione [href] => node/84844 [html] => 1 [attributes] => Array ( [rel] => tag [title] => 2021RUB05 Allegato 7 - Verbale 2 - Elenco candidati e convocazione ) ) ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) ) ) )

2021RUB05 Allegato 9 - Verbale 1 - Criteri

Array ( [field_titolo_frontend_all] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => -4 [#title] => Titolo frontend [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_titolo_frontend_all [#field_type] => text_long [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => allegato [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377819 [uid] => 8831 [title] => 2021RUB05 Allegato 9 - Verbale 1 - Criteri [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84843 [type] => allegato [language] => it [created] => 1639735122 [changed] => 1640605973 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1640605973 [revision_uid] => 102 [taxonomy_vocabulary_2] => Array ( ) [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( ) [field_titolo_frontend_all] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Verbale 1 - Criteri [format] => [safe_value] => Verbale 1 - Criteri ) ) ) [field_allegato_file] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101877 [uid] => 32 [filename] => VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [uri] => public://2021/VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 173839 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735112 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) ) [name] => carriere.docenti [picture] => 0 [data] => b:0; [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377819 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Verbale 1 - Criteri [format] => [safe_value] => Verbale 1 - Criteri ) ) [#formatter] => text_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => Verbale 1 - Criteri ) ) [field_allegato_file] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => -3 [#title] => File [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_allegato_file [#field_type] => file [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => allegato [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377819 [uid] => 8831 [title] => 2021RUB05 Allegato 9 - Verbale 1 - Criteri [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84843 [type] => allegato [language] => it [created] => 1639735122 [changed] => 1640605973 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1640605973 [revision_uid] => 102 [taxonomy_vocabulary_2] => Array ( ) [taxonomy_vocabulary_8] => Array ( ) [body] => Array ( ) [field_titolo_frontend_all] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => Verbale 1 - Criteri [format] => [safe_value] => Verbale 1 - Criteri ) ) ) [field_allegato_file] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101877 [uid] => 32 [filename] => VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [uri] => public://2021/VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 173839 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735112 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) ) [name] => carriere.docenti [picture] => 0 [data] => b:0; [num_revisions] => 1 [current_revision_id] => 377819 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101877 [uid] => 32 [filename] => VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [uri] => public://2021/VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 173839 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735112 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) [#formatter] => file_default [0] => Array ( [#theme] => file_link [#file] => stdClass Object ( [fid] => 101877 [uid] => 32 [filename] => VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [uri] => public://2021/VERB 1 RTDB - RUB05 M-EDF_01 DIMED.pdf [filemime] => application/pdf [filesize] => 173839 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639735112 [type] => document [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2408 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( ) [display] => 1 [description] => ) ) ) [links] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node [#pre_render] => Array ( [0] => drupal_pre_render_links ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) [node] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node__node [#links] => Array ( [node-readmore] => Array ( [title] => Read more about 2021RUB05 Allegato 9 - Verbale 1 - Criteri [href] => node/84843 [html] => 1 [attributes] => Array ( [rel] => tag [title] => 2021RUB05 Allegato 9 - Verbale 1 - Criteri ) ) ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) ) ) )

In the Ancient Courtyard, the dream of Hercules

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There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_date_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-20T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) ) [field_etichetta_box_lancio_news] => Array ( ) [field_img_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101876 [uid] => 13 [filename] => n_orizzonte.jpg [uri] => public://n_orizzonte.jpg [filemime] => image/jpeg [filesize] => 227190 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639732104 [type] => image [field_file_image_alt_text] => Array ( ) [field_file_image_title_text] => Array ( ) [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2048 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( [height] => 831 [width] => 2000 ) [height] => 831 [width] => 2000 [alt] => orizzonte [title] => ) ) ) [field_link_alla_news] => Array ( ) [field_link_esterno_news] => Array ( ) [field_pagina_associata] => Array ( ) [field_link_etichetta] => Array ( ) [field_abstract_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. [format] => [safe_value] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. ) ) ) [field_allegato_news] => Array ( ) [field_categorie_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2296 ) ) ) [field_pub_date] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-20T00:00:00 [value2] => 2022-01-09T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) ) [field_layout_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => single ) ) ) [field_testo_opzionale_news] => Array ( ) [field_url_en_page] => Array ( ) [field_url_en_page_label] => Array ( ) [path] => Array ( [pathauto] => 1 ) [name] => chiara.mezzalira [picture] => 0 [data] => a:2:{s:13:"form_build_id";s:37:"form-e496b743db3766e42eb8a4d1ccc1c014";s:14:"wysiwyg_status";a:1:{i:1;i:1;}} [num_revisions] => 6 [current_revision_id] => 377976 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] =>

There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

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There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

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There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

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There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

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There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

[safe_summary] => ) ) ) [field_date_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-20T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) ) [field_etichetta_box_lancio_news] => Array ( ) [field_img_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [fid] => 101876 [uid] => 13 [filename] => n_orizzonte.jpg [uri] => public://n_orizzonte.jpg [filemime] => image/jpeg [filesize] => 227190 [status] => 1 [timestamp] => 1639732104 [type] => image [field_file_image_alt_text] => Array ( ) [field_file_image_title_text] => Array ( ) [field_folder] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2048 ) ) ) [metadata] => Array ( [height] => 831 [width] => 2000 ) [height] => 831 [width] => 2000 [alt] => orizzonte [title] => ) ) ) [field_link_alla_news] => Array ( ) [field_link_esterno_news] => Array ( ) [field_pagina_associata] => Array ( ) [field_link_etichetta] => Array ( ) [field_abstract_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. [format] => [safe_value] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. ) ) ) [field_allegato_news] => Array ( ) [field_categorie_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [tid] => 2296 ) ) ) [field_pub_date] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => 2021-12-20T00:00:00 [value2] => 2022-01-09T00:00:00 [timezone] => Europe/Paris [timezone_db] => Europe/Paris [date_type] => date ) ) ) [field_layout_news] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => single ) ) ) [field_testo_opzionale_news] => Array ( ) [field_url_en_page] => Array ( ) [field_url_en_page_label] => Array ( ) [path] => Array ( [pathauto] => 1 ) [name] => chiara.mezzalira [picture] => 0 [data] => a:2:{s:13:"form_build_id";s:37:"form-e496b743db3766e42eb8a4d1ccc1c014";s:14:"wysiwyg_status";a:1:{i:1;i:1;}} [num_revisions] => 6 [current_revision_id] => 377976 [is_current] => 1 [is_pending] => [revision_moderation] => [entity_view_prepared] => 1 ) [#items] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. [format] => [safe_value] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. ) ) [#formatter] => text_default [0] => Array ( [#markup] => There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom. ) ) [links] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node [#pre_render] => Array ( [0] => drupal_pre_render_links ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) [node] => Array ( [#theme] => links__node__node [#links] => Array ( [node-readmore] => Array ( [title] => Read more about In the Ancient Courtyard, the dream of Hercules [href] => node/84842 [html] => 1 [attributes] => Array ( [rel] => tag [title] => In the Ancient Courtyard, the dream of Hercules ) ) ) [#attributes] => Array ( [class] => Array ( [0] => links [1] => inline ) ) ) ) [field_date_box_lancio_news] => Array ( [#theme] => field [#weight] => 1 [#title] => Data [#access] => 1 [#label_display] => above [#view_mode] => teaser [#language] => und [#field_name] => field_date_box_lancio_news [#field_type] => date [#field_translatable] => 0 [#entity_type] => node [#bundle] => box_lancio_news [#object] => stdClass Object ( [vid] => 377976 [uid] => 13 [title] => In the Ancient Courtyard, the dream of Hercules [log] => [status] => 1 [comment] => 0 [promote] => 1 [sticky] => 0 [nid] => 84842 [type] => box_lancio_news [language] => it [created] => 1639733920 [changed] => 1640181777 [tnid] => 0 [translate] => 0 [revision_timestamp] => 1640181777 [revision_uid] => 102 [body] => Array ( [und] => Array ( [0] => Array ( [value] =>

There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

[summary] => [format] => 2 [safe_value] =>

There will be no Christmas Tree in the old courtyard of Palazzo Bo during this Holiday Season. Instead, the University of Padua has chosen to engage people through an artwork installation recounting stories of travel, discoveries, truth, limits, and knowledge. Of freedom.

Boundaries of the known world in Antiquity, the Pillars of Hercules belong in the realm of myth.
Evoked by Dante in the journey of Ulysses, imagined by Plato in his search for Atlantis, and ideally overcome by Christopher Columbus as he sailed to the unforeseen Americas. The Pillars of Hercules face men and women with the limits of their knowledge, the possibility to discover something unexpected, the challenge to explore the unknown and deal with uncertainty.

In the Ancient Courtyard, under the stone pillars, a community of students and scholars from all over the world have renovated the search for those boundaries across eight hundred years, tracing new and wider horizons. For the benefit of all.

Since 1222, in the name of freedom in art, science, and culture.

 

Artwork installation by: Comunication Office, University of Padua

Voices: Vittorio Attene, Bruna Laura Filippini

Openings: December 20 - January 9, Ancient Courtyard at Palazzo Bo, until 11 p.m.

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Pagine