NASA Opens Registration for Annual Great Moonbuggy Race

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Dec. 7, 2011

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

Angela Storey
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034
angela.d.storey@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 11-410

NASA OPENS REGISTRATION FOR ANNUAL GREAT MOONBUGGY RACE

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. -- NASA is challenging student inventors to gear up 
for the agency's 19th annual Great Moonbuggy Race. Registration is 
open for the engineering design and racing contest set to culminate 
in a two-day event in Huntsville, Ala., on April 13-14, 2012. 

Participating high schools, colleges and universities may register up 
to two teams and two vehicles. Registration for U.S. teams closes 
Feb. 10. International registration closes Jan. 9. For complete rules 
and to register, visit: 

http://moonbuggy.msfc.nasa.gov 

The race is organized annually by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center 
and held at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center, both in Huntsville. Since 
1994, NASA has challenged student teams to build and race 
human-powered rovers of their own design. These fast, lightweight 
moonbuggies address many of the same engineering challenges overcome 
by Apollo-era lunar rover developers at Marshall in the late 1960s. 

Apollo 15 astronauts David Scott and James Irwin drove the first rover 
on the moon's surface on July 31, 1971. Two more rovers followed 
during the Apollo 16 and 17 missions in 1972, expanding astronauts' 
reach surface and permitting greater focus on scientific exploration. 


As they prepare for the race, student teams carry on that tradition of 
engineering ingenuity, competing to post the fastest vehicle assembly 
and race times in their divisions, while incurring the fewest 
penalties. 

The rocket center's challenging, looping, curving half-mile course of 
gravel embankments, sand pits and obstacles mimics lunar craters and 
ancient, fossilized lava flows. The course gives racers a realistic 
moon-traversing experience -- minus the airlessness and 
weightlessness. 

Prizes are awarded to the three teams in each division with the 
fastest final times. NASA and industry sponsors present additional 
awards for engineering ingenuity, team spirit and overcoming unique 
challenges -- such as the race weekend's most memorable crash. 

Teams from Puerto Rico won the top trophies in 2011. Teodoro Aguilar 
Mora Vocational High School of Yabucoa won first place in the high 
school division with a best time of 3 minutes, 18 seconds -- just one 
second over the course record. 

The University of Puerto Rico in Humacao, the only school to enter a 
moonbuggy every year since the race's start in 1994, posted a best 
time of 3 minutes, 41 seconds to win the college division for the 
second straight year. 

Participation in the race increased from just eight college teams in 
1994 -- the high school division was added two years later -- to more 
than 70 high school and college national and international teams in 
2011. 

Nearly 20,000 people watched live and archived coverage of the 2011 
race on UStream, an interactive, real-time webcasting platform. For 
archived footage of the competition, visit: 

http://www.ustream.tv/channel/nasa-msfc  

For images and additional information about past races, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/topics/moonmars/moonbuggy.html 

For information about NASA's education programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/education 

	
-end-



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