IT might sound like something out of a Hollywood disaster movie when a doctor is called on to talk an astronaut through an operation from Mission Control.

However, for Dr Christina Mackaill it could well become a reality despite being literally millions of miles away from her day job on a busy emergency unit with NHS Ayrshire and Arran.

It was an interest which was sparked at university but space medicine could become her speciality.

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She is among three women who have set their their sights set on a future in space.

From the emergency doctor, the space suit tester and astrophotographer, they are all taking part in this year’s Big Bang festival of astronomy and science.

Dr Mackaill’s day job in A and E is challenging enough, but when the scrubs come off her focus shifts to planning how to treat sick or injured astronauts.

The Edinburgh-born medic is one of several guests at the festival who are underlining that the days are vanishing when space exploration was dominated by male fighter pilots.

16-year-old Scottish astro-photographer Helena Cochrane from Wigtown is taking part in the festival which is close to home

16-year-old Scottish astro-photographer Helena Cochrane from Wigtown is taking part in the festival which is close to home

From March 3 to 6, the Wigtown Festival Company has a series of free, ticketed online events lined up which include the chance to meet 16-year-old Scottish astrophotographer Helena Cochrane and US space professional Kellie Gerardi, who has a personal mission to democratise space.

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Dr Mackaill, who went to university in Glasgow and trained in Dundee, is working towards becoming one of the world’s tiny but growing band of space doctors and will specialise in emergency medicine.

Speaking ahead of her Big Bang appearance, called The Space Doctor Is In, she said: “With Moon and Mars missions on the way and a burgeoning of space tourism coming soon we have to be able to deal with medical emergencies in space.

“There are no hospitals, no ambulances and will often be no doctors available. So one of the things we are looking at right now is how doctors need to respond if they are rushed into Mission Control and need to talk the crew of a spaceship through how to deal with something like a heart attack in microgravity.”

The Veil Nebula, a huge, feathery cloud of heated gas and dust in the constellation Cygnus - pictured by 16-year-old Scottish astro-photographer Helena Cochrane

The Veil Nebula, a huge, feathery cloud of heated gas and dust in the constellation Cygnus - pictured by 16-year-old Scottish astro-photographer Helena Cochrane

Dr Mackaill has already had a significant impact in the field, having authored two papers on extra-terrestrial CPR and co-developing “a gravity-defying method of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for astronauts visiting the moon and one day Mars”.

She has ambitions to go into space herself and with the European Space Agency having just opened applications for new trainees, she will be among the candidates.

Dr Mackaill founded Scotland’s first space medicine society in 2016 and is currently collaborating with NASA on a paper about emergency medicine in space.

US space professional Kellie Gerardi, who has a personal mission to democratise space

US space professional Kellie Gerardi, who has a personal mission to democratise space

Astrophotographer Helena Cochrane, who lives in Wigtown, will be taking part in a discussion with Abigail Beall, author The Art of Urban Astronomy: A Guide to Stargazing Wherever You Are in an event called Reach for the Stars.

Ms Cochrane has even set up a YouTube channel with thousands of followers which charted her progress from being an absolute beginner.

She said: “I love astrophotography and have met so many brilliant people through it, such as some truly inspirational women in STEM. It was something I really wanted to share so other people could be intrigued by it, and discover a love for the night sky as well.

“Taking deep space pictures is a challenging task and I soon realised that there wasn’t a lot out there for beginners to learn from. So, I decided to set up a YouTube channel so people could follow what it was like for me as I started to learn.”

Her results are so impressive that Big Bang is staging an online exhibition of some of her photography.

Kellie Gerardi hopes the new age of space travel will be open to all – and intends to lead the way. It’s something she will discuss in a Big Bang event called Not Necessarily Rocket Science.

She said: “It’s something I’ve been laying the groundwork for throughout my whole career. So for me it’s travelling to space is not a matter of if but when. But my real ambition is about democratising access to space and opening that final frontier for more people."

“In the early days it might have been that the steely-eyed test pilot was the ideal candidate for going into space but as spaceflight evolves, crew needs and candidate profiles will too.

“The first flights were about function, in the future it will be a lot more about experience. I look forward to the time when the poets, the artists, and the musicians, come back and share their experience with people on Earth.”

Ms Gerardi’s sense of excitement and possibility is summed up by the fact that one of the first experiences she gave her newborn daughter, Delta V, was a trip to Cape Canaveral for the launch of a Falcon Heavy rocket.

She will also discuss her acclaimed book, also called Not Necessarily Rocket Science, about her unconventional career in the space industry. Her lengthy Wikipedia entry lists a multitude of accomplishments, describing her as a commercial spaceflight industry professional and a veteran of the Mars Desert Research Station who has also taken part in space suit testing.

In 2018 she was named as a Scientist-Astronaut Candidate with Project PoSSUM (Polar Suborbital Science in the Upper Mesosphere), the first crewed suborbital spaceflight research programme.

Astrophotographer Helena Cochrane, who lives in Wigtown, will be taking part in a discussion with Abigail Beall, author The Art of Urban Astronomy: A Guide to Stargazing Wherever You Are in an event called Reach for the Stars.

Ms Cochrane has even set up a YouTube channel with thousands of followers which charted her progress from being an absolute beginner.

She said: “I love astrophotography and have met so many brilliant people through it, such as some truly inspirational women in STEM. It was something I really wanted to share so other people could be intrigued by it, and discover a love for the night sky as well.

“Taking deep space pictures is a challenging task and I soon realised that there wasn’t a lot out there for beginners to learn from. So, I decided to set up a YouTube channel so people could follow what it was like for me as I started to learn.”

Her results are so impressive that Big Bang is staging an online exhibition of some of her photography.