| NASA challenges 350 rocketeers nationwide to Aim a Mile High |
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| 2009 Archived News by National Aeronautics and Space Administration | |
| Friday, December 04, 2009 | |
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These annual rocketeering projects are the Student Launch Initiative for middle school and high school teams and the University Student Launch Initiative for colleges and universities. Both challenges are designed to inspire students to parlay their interests in science, technology, engineering and mathematics into rewarding careers in fields critical to NASA's mission of exploration and scientific discovery. Beginning in the fall school term, each team will spend approximately eight months designing, building and field-testing their rocket. They address the same physics, propulsion and flight challenges faced by professional rocket engineers. The students also must challenge themselves as scientists, creating a unique, on-board science experiment that can survive the mile-high flight and yield test results after the vehicle parachutes back to Earth. In addition, teams will create a project Web site, write multiple preliminary and post-launch reports, and develop educational engagement projects for schools and youth organizations in their communities. The goal is to inspire even younger generations of future explorers. The Student Launch Projects will conclude April 15-18, 2010, when the teams gather at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. Marshall manages the projects. NASA engineers will put the students' rockets through a professional design review similar to that undertaken for every NASA launch. The students then will embark on a two-day "launchfest" at Bragg Farms in Toney, Ala., where they are cheered on each year by hundreds of Marshall team members and North Alabama rocket enthusiasts. "The participants in NASA's Student Launch Projects continue to demonstrate the sky is no limit for enterprising young minds committed to creativity, innovation and teamwork," said Tammy Rowan, manager of the Academic Affairs Office at Marshall, which organizes the event. "As a new rocket-building season gets under way and we head toward another exhilarating launch event next April, many of these industrious young people are headed toward rewarding careers in which they'll lead new journeys of exploration and discovery — not just to Earth's lower troposphere, but to other worlds." New Student Launch Initiative teams hail from middle schools and high schools in Florida, Kansas, Kentucky, Pennsylvania, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin. Returning teams are from Illinois, North Carolina and Wisconsin. Middle school and high school teams taking part in the Student Launch Initiative are eligible to participate in the challenges up to two years. Each new team receives a $3,700 grant and a travel stipend from NASA, and each returning team receives a $2,450 grant. New University Student Launch Initiative teams represent colleges and universities in Alabama, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Michigan, North Carolina and Texas. Returning teams hail from Alabama, Arkansas, Arizona, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota and Tennessee. College and university teams taking part in the University Student Launch Initiative seek funding from their state's Space Grant Consortium, and are not limited to two years of eligibility. The University Student Launch Initiative is a competitive event sponsored by ATK Space Systems of Magna, Utah, which contributes prizes, including a $5,000 check for the first-place winner. The Student Launch Projects are collaboratively sponsored by NASA's Exploration Systems Mission Directorate, Space Operations Mission Directorate and Education Flight Projects. NASA held the first student launch event in 2001. As its popularity grew, NASA created in 2006 the twin challenges of the Student Launch Initiative for middle schools and high schools and the University Student Launch Initiative for colleges and universities. Marshall issues a request for proposals each fall. For more information about the Student Launch Projects and a list of participating schools, visit: http://education.msfc.nasa.gov/sli http://education.msfc.nasa.gov/usli For more information about other NASA education initiatives, visit: |
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Our experiment? We're following up on John, Paul, George, and Ringo - the first ladybugs to fly in space. These four little guys hitched a ride to space on STS-93 back in 1999 in an experiment to see whether zero gravity would prevent the bugs from eating one of their natural food sources: aphids (it seems that zero G didn't hurt their appetite!).
Our bunch of critters won't be going into microgravity, but they are going to be exposed to about 5 times the shuttle's 4-G liftoff, at least for a short ride to one mile. Our team will be making observations of the entire pack of bugs for quite a while before their flight, then separating out controls to stay at home, some to be packed into the environmentally and video surveiled launch container - a coin toss to see which launch container stays as a non-fly container while the other container takes the ride, then back to the lab for more observations on the effect of high burst gravity.
Our web site is: www.texanengineering.org if you'd like to get a look at our proposal to NASA, and our just released Preliminary Design Review where we've refined the design of our rocket (a 4" diameter 88" tall 4FNC that looks like it's going to ride a Cesaroni K445 at flight time). There's a Power Point presentation that gives a quick look at the project to date, if you don't want to wade through the entire 36 page PDR document.
I'm hoping to get some (or all) of our kids (six guys and one girl) onto the forums to learn a bit more, so if they gather up enough courage to ask a question, please help 'em out if you can! This is a great way for adult rocketeers to "pay it forward".
Wayne