NASA Invites Students to Drop Everything

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Sept. 24, 2009

Stephanie Schierholz 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-4997 
stephanie.schierholz@xxxxxxxx 

Jeannette Owens 
Glenn Research Center, Cleveland 
216-433-2990 
jeannette.p.owens@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 09-223

NASA INVITES STUDENTS TO DROP EVERYTHING

CLEVELAND -- NASA is inviting student teams to experience microgravity 
science by designing and building experiments to be conducted in a 
NASA drop tower. Dropping In a Microgravity Environment, or DIME, is 
a competition for high school students. Students in grades 6-9 can 
compete in What If No Gravity?, or WING. 

Both competitions are open to teams from any state, the District of 
Columbia and Puerto Rico. Teams may be formed from a science class or 
club, group of classes, scout troop or similar organization. Each 
team must have an adult advisor, such as a teacher, parent or 
technical consultant. 

To enter the competitions, teams must develop a concept for a 
microgravity experiment, and prepare and submit a proposal to NASA's 
Glenn Research Center in Cleveland by Monday, Nov. 2. A panel of 
engineers and scientists at Glenn will evaluate and select the 
top-ranked proposals for both DIME and WING by Dec. 10. For 
information about entering NASA's DIME and WING student competitions, 
visit: 



http://spaceflightsystems.grc.nasa.gov/DIME.html 


The top four DIME teams will be invited to Cleveland in April 2010 to 
conduct their experiments in Glenn's 2.2-Second Drop Tower and review 
the results with NASA personnel. They also will tour Glenn facilities 
and participate in other activities. All DIME participants visiting 
NASA must be U.S. citizens. 

Several additional DIME teams and up to 50 WING teams will be invited 
to ship their experiments to Glenn to be drop-tested by NASA staff. 
These experiments and the resulting data will be returned to the 
teams so they can prepare reports about their findings. 

These and similar education programs help NASA attract and retain 
students in science, technology, engineering and mathematics -- 
disciplines critical to the agency's future missions. 

NASA's student drop experiment competitions are sponsored by the 
Teaching From Space Office at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. 
The office manages education opportunities that use the unique 
environment of human spaceflight. 

For more information about NASA's education programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/education 


For information about NASA's Glenn Research Center, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/glenn 

	
-end-



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