NASA Selects Student Experiments to Fly on Sounding Rocket

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March 14, 2006

Keith Koehler 
Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia 
(757) 824-1579 

Sonja Alexander 
Headquarters, Washington 
(202) 358-1761 

RELEASE: 06-094

NASA SELECTS STUDENT EXPERIMENTS TO FLY ON SOUNDING ROCKET

NASA selected 10 student experiments from across the country to fly on 
a rocket mission June 7 from the Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops 
Island, Va. 

During the weeks leading up to the launch, students and their teachers 
will work with engineers and technicians at Wallops to prepare their 
experiments for flight. The student experiments will be flown on a 
NASA Orion suborbital sounding rocket. 

In its ninth year, this program provides students the unique 
opportunity to participate in all aspects of a science mission. Five 
of the experiments will fly in the main body of the rocket's payload 
section, called the Suborbital Student Experiment Module, while the 
other five will be placed in the nosecone. 

Launched early in the morning, the 20-foot rocket is expected to carry 
the experiments more than 25 miles above the Earth. After descending 
by parachute and landing in the Atlantic Ocean, the experiments will 
be recovered and returned to the students later in the day. The 
students will examine and analyze their experiment data and present 
their preliminary findings to NASA personnel the following day 

"The students design the experiment, build the hardware, participate 
in the launch process, support removing the experiments from the 
payload after launch and recovery, analyze the data and present their 
results," said Phil Eberspeaker, chief of the NASA Sounding Rockets 
Program Office at Wallops. "This will be an experience they remember 
all their life and hopefully will guide them into science and 
engineering careers." 

Wireless communications, magnetic fields, fluids and payload 
temperatures during flight are the focus of the main payload 
experiments. Students also will study the effects of the flight 
environment, such as radiation and high gravitational forces, on a 
variety of materials placed in the nosecone and the payload section. 

Approximately 40 students and teachers are expected to attend flight 
week activities at Wallops, June 5 through 8. While at Wallops they 
will receive instruction in rocketry and electronics and tour the 
NASA rocket, scientific balloon and aircraft facilities. 

The schools and organizations selected: 

Columbus High School, Columbus, Ga.
GlenBrook North High School, Northbrook, Ill.
Parkside High School, Salisbury, Md.
Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Va.
Harriet Tubman School, Dolton, Ill.
Key Peninsula Middle School, Lakebay, Wash.
Wendover High School, Wendover, Utah
Graham High School, St. Paris, Ohio.
Cub Scout Pack 151, Salisbury, Md.

For information about NASA and agency programs on the Web, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/home 

	
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