NASA Names Winners in High School Supersonic Research Contest

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May 15, 2009

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

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

RELEASE: 09-108

NASA NAMES WINNERS IN HIGH SCHOOL SUPERSONIC RESEARCH CONTEST

WASHINGTON -- Airplanes shaped like huge darts and rocket ships -- 
that's what the future of supersonic passenger travel may look like, 
according to a number of high school students. 

Teenagers from eight states and 11 foreign countries imagined that 
future as part of a competition sponsored by NASA. The students were 
asked to write a well-documented research paper describing what needs 
to be accomplished to make supersonic flight available to commercial 
passengers by 2020. 

Edric San-Miguel, a junior from Norfolk Technical Center in Norfolk, 
Va., earned the top score among all the entries. Sidharth Krishnan, a 
senior from Anglo-Chinese Junior College in Singapore, won top honors 
in the non-U.S. category. 

More than 120 teenagers submitted 60 entries in four categories: U.S. 
individual, U.S. team, non-U.S. individual and non-U.S. team. A 
junior and senior from Arcadia High School in Arcadia, Calif., led 
the American teams. Three ninth-graders from the National High School 
of Computer Science in Tudor Vianu, Bucharest, Romania won the top 
prize for non-U.S. teams. 

"All the conceptual designs were imaginative and innovative," said Bob 
Mack, a veteran supersonics researcher at NASA's Langley Research 
Center in Hampton, Va., who reviewed all the top papers. "The design 
in the winning paper showed the student had a definite respect and 
appreciation for technical realities while still being imaginative." 

Students could choose from two options in the competition. They could 
write a research paper to discuss the challenges and solutions of 
supersonic flight or propose a design for a small supersonic airliner 
that could enter commercial service in 2020. 

A group of NASA engineers reviewed all the entries. The judges based 
their scores on how well students focused their papers and how well 
they addressed four basic criteria: informed content, creativity and 
imagination, organization, and writing. 

NASA will award the top scoring papers from the U.S. a cash prize of 
$1,000 for the individual award winner and $1,500 for the team. 
Non-U.S. students will receive an engraved trophy, but are not 
eligible for cash prizes. All participants will receive a NASA 
certificate. The competition was sponsored by the Fundamental 
Aeronautics Program of NASA's Aeronautics Research Mission 
Directorate in Washington. 

For a complete list of winners and details of their designs, visit: 



http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/competition_winners.htm 


For more information about NASA's aeronautics research, visit: 










http://aeronautics.nasa.gov 


For more information about NASA and other agency programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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