College Students Design Future Aircraft in NASA Competition

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July 7, 2008

Beth Dickey 
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-2087 
beth.dickey-1@xxxxxxxx

Kathy Barnstorff 
Langley Research Center, Hampton, Va. 
757-864-9886/344-8511 
kathy.barnstorff@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 08-168

COLLEGE STUDENTS DESIGN FUTURE AIRCRAFT IN NASA COMPETITION

HAMPTON, Va. -- Sixty-one students from 14 colleges and universities 
around the globe have imagined what the next generation of airliners 
and cargo planes may look like.

Fourteen teams and two individual students submitted their designs in 
the annual competition sponsored by NASA's Fundamental Aeronautics 
Program, part of the agency's Aeronautics Research Mission 
Directorate.

The highest scoring graduate team was from Georgia Tech in Atlanta. 
Undergraduate team honors went to Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va.

The contest asked students to create a future subsonic transport 
aircraft that could carry up to 50,000 pounds, operate on runways 
between 1,500 and 3,000 feet long, and cruise at speeds between 595 
and 625 mph - about the average speed of airliners today. The 
competition also stressed that concept planes should use alternative 
fuels and be quieter and more environmentally friendly than today's 
commercial fleet.

"The nation's air transportation system is under tremendous pressure 
to increase performance and capacity without causing additional 
damage to the environment," said Juan Alonso, director of the 
Fundamental Aeronautics Program. "Through competitions such as this, 
we are nurturing a new generation of engineers who can deliver the 
solutions we so desperately need."

The judges graded the designs on criteria including creativity and 
imagination, feasibility and cost analysis, and comprehensive 
discussion of design concept.

"The invention, imagination and engineering exhibited in these college 
proposals was extraordinary, and in parts superior to the concepts 
prevalent in the current professional literature. These entries bode 
well for the future of civilian aeronautics," said Dennis Bushnell, 
chief scientist at NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. 
Bushnell was one of several NASA experts who judged the competition. 

As part of the competition, six U.S. students received a 10-week paid 
summer internship at one of four NASA research centers around the 
country. Non-U.S. student winners received an engraved trophy and 
certificate.

Sponsors are already planning next year's competition, which will be 
announced by the end of this summer. 

A complete list of winners of the college contest can be found at:

http://aero.larc.nasa.gov

For more information about NASA's Aeronautics Research Mission 
Directorate, visit:

http://aeronautics.nasa.gov

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

	
-end-



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