NASA Performs Student Experiments For Whole World To See

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Oct. 7, 2011

Joshua Buck 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1100 
jbuck@xxxxxxxx 

Stacey Tearne 
Space Adventures, Vienna, Va. 
202-256-7917 
stearne@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 11-342

NASA PERFORMS STUDENT EXPERIMENTS FOR WHOLE WORLD TO SEE

WASHINGTON -- NASA announced it will provide support to Space 
Adventures, Ltd. of Vienna, Va., to conduct a global competition for 
students to design experiments that will be performed in space and 
broadcast around the world. 

NASA entered into a non-reimbursable Space Act Agreement with Space 
Adventures for astronauts aboard the International Space Station 250 
miles above Earth to conduct the winning experiments on the orbiting 
outpost. The experiments will be performed on the U.S. portion of the 
space station that has been designated as a national laboratory. 

The National Laboratory Education Initiative seeks innovative ways to 
use the unique microgravity environment of the space station to 
promote science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) 
education. The contest is designed to encourage students from 14 to 
18 years old to develop STEM skills through practical experience. The 
goal is to develop creative and analytical abilities by working on 
teams to solve problems using the latest information technology and 
tools. 

"The space station really is the greatest science classroom we have," 
said Leland Melvin, associate administrator for education at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington. "This contest will capitalize on 
students' excitement for space exploration while engaging them in 
real-life scientific research and experimentation." 

NASA representatives will join a panel of internationally renowned 
scientists, astronauts and teachers to judge the entries with input 
from the YouTube community. Public voting will begin on Jan. 3, 2012. 
Two global winners will be announced in January 2012. Both of those 
experiments will fly aboard the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's 
HTV-3 mission next summer. Six regional finalists will be selected in 
March 2012. Regional finalists will receive get a flight on a ZERO-G 
aircraft. 

Contest entrants may submit up to three experiments in either life 
sciences or physics. They must submit a two-minute video application 
by Dec. 7 via YouTube.com. The public will be able to follow the 
competition and watch the experiments via video streaming on 
YouTube's website. 

The station is a unique partnership between the space agencies of the 
United States, Canada, Europe, Japan and Russia. The station brings 
together the knowledge, technologies and resources of several nations 
working toward the common goal of putting humans in space 
permanently. For information about the space station, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/station 


After 1 p.m. EDT Monday, Oct. 10, you can find more information about 
how to enter the competition or to submit a video application at: 


http://www.youtube.com/SpaceLab 

	
-end-



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