NASA Announces Two National Student Science Competitions

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Oct. 12, 2011

Ann Marie Trotta 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1601 
ann.marie.trotta@xxxxxxxx 

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

RELEASE: 11-346

NASA ANNOUNCES TWO NATIONAL STUDENT SCIENCE COMPETITIONS

CLEVELAND -- NASA is offering students the opportunity to compete in 
two microgravity challenges: "Dropping In a Microgravity 
Environment," or DIME, and "What If No Gravity?" or WING. 

DIME is a team competition for high school students in the ninth 
through 12th grades. WING is a competition for student teams from the 
fifth through eighth grades. Both are project-oriented activities 
that last throughout the school year for the selected teams. 

DIME and WING are open to student teams from all 50 states, 
Washington, Puerto Rico, Guam, the Commonwealth of the Northern 
Mariana Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands. Each team must have an 
adult supervisor, such as a teacher, parent or technical consultant. 
Teams may be from any type of organization or club, such as a science 
class, a group of friends, a scout troop or youth group. 

Proposals are due by Nov. 1. A panel of NASA scientists and engineers 
will evaluate and select the top-ranked proposals by Dec. 1. The 
winning teams will design and build the experiments that will be 
conducted in the 2.2-Second Drop Tower at NASA's Glenn Research 
Center in Cleveland. 

The 79-foot tower gets its name because when an experiment is 
"dropped" into it, the package experiences weightlessness, or 
microgravity, for 2.2 seconds. Researchers from around the world use 
this tower to study the effects of microgravity on physical 
phenomena, such as combustion and fluid dynamics, and to develop new 
technology for future space missions. 

The top four DIME teams will receive an expense-paid trip to Glenn in 
March 2012 to conduct their experiments, review the results with NASA 
personnel and tour the center's facilities. All DIME participants 
visiting NASA must be U.S. citizens. 

Four additional DIME teams, and up to 30 WING teams, will be selected 
to build their experiments and ship them to Glenn for NASA testing. 
These experiments and the resulting data will be returned to the 
teams, so they can prepare reports about their findings. 

For more information about entering DIME and WING student team 
competitions, visit: 


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


DIME and WING are part of NASA's education program. The program allows 
the agency to continue its work around the country to inspire, engage 
and educate the next generation of engineers and scientists. 

The Teaching From Space Office at NASA's Johnson Space Center in 
Houston sponsors the DIME and WING competitions. The office enhances 
education opportunities that use the unique environment of human 
spaceflight; works with crew members to arrange International Space 
Station in-flight education downlinks; and provides education payload 
operations and demonstrations. 

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


http://www.nasa.gov/education 


For more information about NASA's Teaching From Space programs, visit 


www.nasa.gov/education/tfs 


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


http://www.nasa.gov/glenn 

	
-end-



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