NASA Funds Universities' New Experiments for Suborbital Flights

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May 23, 2007

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726 

RELEASE: 07-121

NASA FUNDS UNIVERSITIES' NEW EXPERIMENTS FOR SUBORBITAL FLIGHTS

WASHINGTON - NASA has selected four universities to conduct suborbital 
scientific research that is a new step in reinvigorating the agency's 
sounding rocket science program.

Managed out of NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, Va., 
the sounding rocket program offers a low-cost test bed for new 
scientific studies and techniques, scientific instrumentation and 
spacecraft technology. Launches take place world-wide, including from 
Wallops, the White Sands Missile Range, N.M., and Poker Flat Research 
Range, Alaska.

"NASA's sounding rocket program also is one of the most cost effective 
ways to train future orbital science mission team members and 
principle investigators, giving them hands-on space flight 
experience," said Alan Stern, associate administrator for the Science 
Mission Directorate, NASA Headquarters, Washington. "I hope this 
effort will be a catalyst for more suborbital work conducted for 
space science and Earth science research."

NASA's Science Mission Directorate funded approximately $4.2 million 
in grants. Two are university-led science investigations from 
proposals selected by the directorate's heliophysics division, and 
the directorate's astrophysics division selected two others. These 
four payloads supplement the existing astrophysics and heliophysics 
rocket programs.

Proposals, evaluated by a NASA scientific panel and external 
reviewers, were selected based on scientific and technical merits, 
costs and relevance to NASA programs. Grants will be funded from 
between two to five years with research launches planned to occur 
between 2008 and 2010.

The newly selected university payloads are:

University of Wisconsin, Madison/Kenneth Nordsieck, Principle 
Investigator (PI)
"Exploring New Astrophysical Diagnostics with the Far-Ultraviolet 
SpectroPolarimeter." The payload will make astronomical polarization 
measurements in the far ultraviolet and explore new diagnostics of 
the geometry and magnetic fields in stellar envelopes and 
interstellar medium.

Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H./Kristina Lynch (PI). Partnering 
universities: University of Alaska, Fairbanks; University of New 
Hampshire, Durham; Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.
"The Changing Aurora: in Situ and Camera Analysis of Dynamic Electron 
Precipitation Structures." The payload will perform multi camera 
investigations of substorm auroras and their variations.

University of Colorado, Boulder/James Green (PI)
"Imaging and Spectroscopy in the Far Ultraviolet." The payload will 
perform investigations of the ratio of molecular hydrogen to carbon 
monoxide found in gas clouds of other galaxies to accurately 
determine the masses of those galaxies. 

University of Southern California, Los Angeles/Darrell Judge (PI)
"A New Advanced Extreme Ultraviolet Optics Free Spectrometer." The 
payload will test a new photoelectron focusing system that may be 
used for future solar observations for calibration for space 
research.

NASA sounding rockets provide brief flights into space for payloads 
that include atmospheric probes, astronomy telescopes, detectors and 
other technology and science investigations. Users include 
corporations, universities and a host of government agencies and 
other institutions. 

Numerous high profile NASA satellite missions have been enabled or 
enhanced by technology and techniques developed using sounding 
rockets. Many NASA instrument and mission principal investigators 
received their start in space experimentation participating in 
sounding rocket missions. 

For more information on NASA's science programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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