Moon Work Design Contest Offers NASA Internships to Winners

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Dec. 4, 2009

Ashley Edwards/Grey Hautaluoma 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1756/0668 
ashley.edwards-1@xxxxxxxx 
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx 

MEDIA ADVISORY: 09-278

MOON WORK DESIGN CONTEST OFFERS NASA INTERNSHIPS TO WINNERS

WASHINGTON -- Talented engineering students who have ideas on how 
future explorers might live on the moon could find themselves working 
at NASA as paid interns. 

The 2010 NASA Moon Work engineering design challenge seeks to motivate 
college students by giving them first-hand experience with the 
process of developing new technologies. To participate in the 
contest, students will submit their original design for tools or 
instruments that can help astronauts live and work on the moon. 
Top-ranked students will be offered a chance to intern with a team 
from NASA's Exploration Technology Development Program. 

The Exploration Technology Development Program develops new 
technologies that will enable NASA to conduct future human 
exploration missions while reducing mission risk and cost. The 
program is maturing near-term technologies to help enable the first 
flight of the Orion crew exploration vehicle and developing long-lead 
technologies needed for possible lunar exploration missions. 

Winning Moon Work contestants also will have a chance to attend field 
tests conducted by the Desert Research and Technology Studies 
Program, managed by NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston. The 
program conducts annual tests of new technologies in landscapes that 
are close analogs of the moon and other harsh space environments. 

Students should submit a notice of intent to enter the contest by Dec. 
15. Final entries for the Moon Work challenge are due May 15, 2010. 
All entries must be from students at U.S. colleges or universities. 
Although non-citizens may be part of a team, only U.S. citizens may 
win NASA internships or travel awards. 

For complete details and to enter the contest, visit: 



http://moonwork.larc.nasa.gov 


Christopher Newport University in Newport News, Va., manages the 
student contest for NASA's Exploration Systems Mission Directorate 
and NASA's Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. 

Through this and NASA's other college and university programs, the 
agency is developing student skills in science, technology, 
engineering and mathematics -- disciplines critical to achieving the 
agency's space exploration missions. 

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










http://www.nasa.gov/education 

	
-end-



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