Students Design Futuristic Flying Rescue Vehicles For NASA Contest

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June 21, 2010

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

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


RELEASE: 10-149

STUDENTS DESIGN FUTURISTIC FLYING RESCUE VEHICLES FOR NASA CONTEST

WASHINGTON -- A rotorcraft that resembles a catamaran has taken the 
top prize in a NASA aeronautics competition for college students to 
develop a multi-purpose aircraft. 

The entry by ten students at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., met the 
competition's challenge to design a civilian aircraft that could 
rescue up to 50 survivors in the event of a natural disaster, hover 
to help rescue missions, land on ground or water, travel 920 miles 
and cruise at speeds up to 345 miles an hour. The amphibious 
tilt-rotor vehicle also had to be able to fight fires by siphoning 
water into an internal tank, then dumping it after airborne. 

NASA's Aeronautics Mission Directorate in Washington sponsored the 
competition through 
the Subsonic Rotary Wing Project in its Fundamental Aeronautics 
Program. 

More than 100 college students from the United States, India, the 
United Kingdom, Canada, Poland, China and Nigeria entered the contest 
in teams or as individuals. 

Susan Gorton, principal investigator of the Subsonic Rotary Wing 
Project, led the review panel. "The designs were creative, innovative 
and looked at many issues in detail," she said. "Reading the student 
papers highlighted how many bright young engineers are interested in 
the future of rotary wing vehicles. I certainly hope some of them 
decide to work with NASA as a career choice." 

Ten Virginia Tech undergraduates came up with the winning design-- a 
twin-hulled vehicle with a large prop-rotor flanking each hull. A 
team of 10 graduate students from Georgia Tech in Atlanta and the 
University of Liverpool in England took second place, and 28 
undergraduates from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville 
placed third. 

NASA sponsored the design contest to interest students in aeronautics 
and engineering careers. Each winning U.S. team received a cash award 
and an engraved trophy through a NASA education grant and cooperative 
agreement. Cash awards ranged from $5,000 for first place to $3,000 
for third place. Five of the students from the top U.S. teams also 
won paid summer internships at NASA. 

To read more about the competition and see some of the rotorcraft 
designs, visit: 



http://www.aeronautics.nasa.gov/competition_winners2010_college.htm 


The next student aeronautics competition will focus on green aviation. 
For more information, visit: 



http://aero.larc.nasa.gov/competitions.htm 


For more about other NASA programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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