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NASA Student Launch program selects 46 teams by Staff Writers Washington DC (SPX) Oct 08, 2020
On Oct. 1, NASA announced the 46 teams, representing 20 states and Puerto Rico, selected to compete in the 2021 NASA Student Launch - one of seven Artemis Student Challenges. The eight-month challenge, managed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, provides a realistic experience for middle school, high school, and college students to follow the engineering design process NASA and industry engineers use when developing and operating new hardware. The student teams are required to design, build, test, and fly a payload and high-powered amateur rocket to an altitude between 3,500 and 5,500 feet. Teams also must meet multiple documentation and presentation milestones with NASA experts as they develop their rocket. The reports often total hundreds of pages of work by the end of the competition year. As NASA continues to innovate its rockets and payloads, so too do the student teams competing in Student Launch. The college/university division teams will tackle a brand new payload challenge: a lander deployed during the rocket's descent that lands upright, or uprights itself, and levels itself to within 5 degrees of flat. Following landing and leveling, the lander must take a 360-degree panoramic photo and transmit it to its team. Middle and high school teams can choose to attempt the college/university division payload or develop their own unique scientific or engineering payload. Changes to competition rules have been made due to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Notable Changes Teams will not be required to travel to Huntsville in April to complete the project and compete in the rocket launch, as in all previous years of the competition. Teams unable to travel and participate in person in the Launch Week activities will be permitted to complete their competition launch at a National Association of Rocketry or Tripoli Rocket Association-sanctioned launch in their local area. Teams will continue to "call their shot" by predicting, months in advance of their competition flight, their rocket's ultimate altitude. When teams submit their preliminary design review package to NASA in November, they will submit their predictions and target altitudes for their competition launch. The 2019 Altitude Award winning team in the college division was within 12 feet of its target altitude, while the winning team in the middle/high school division in 2020 missed its target by 7 feet. Teams also are scored in nearly a dozen other categories, including safety, vehicle design, social media presence, and science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) engagement. The STEM Engagement Award encourages and recognizes teams for sharing their knowledge and experiences with the next generation of engineers, scientists, and explorers. Marshall's Office of STEM Engagement manages Student Launch to stimulate innovation and advance NASA's Human Exploration and Operations mission through collaboration with educational institutions and students - the Artemis Generation, who will help NASA explore the Moon and Mars. For more inforamtion of NASA's Student Launch program please visit here
Aerojet Rocketdyne' new Large Solid Rocket Motor Facility opens Camden AK (SPX) Oct 07, 2020 Aerojet Rocketdyne's new large solid rocket motor manufacturing facility is officially open for operations, highlighting the company's significant investments in the modernization and innovation of its solid rocket motor production capabilities, and continuing the company's expansion in southern Arkansas. "The Engineering, Manufacturing and Development facility is the newest, state-of-the-art large solid rocket motor manufacturing facility in the nation, and we look forward to expanding our decade ... read more
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