Zero Robotics Challenge Winners Decided in High-Tech Competition

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Jan. 24, 2012

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

RELEASE: 12-029

ZERO ROBOTICS CHALLENGE WINNERS DECIDED IN HIGH-TECH COMPETITION

WASHINGTON -- Two hundred high school students packed an auditorium at 
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) on Monday, Jan. 23, 
for a competition to program miniature satellites aboard the 
International Space Station. Alliance Rocket from the United States 
and virtual participants Alliance CyberAvo from Europe were named the 
winners in the third annual NASA-sponsored Zero Robotics SPHERES 
Challenge. 

Student teams wrote programming code for two small NASA robotic 
satellites aboard the station. Astronauts Don Pettit and Andre 
Kuipers, who currently live aboard the International Space Station, 
presided over the event and gathered data from the student-controlled 
SPHERES flight programs after each phase of the competition. Current 
and former astronauts were on hand at MIT to share their experiences 
in space with the student audience, including Greg Chamitoff, Leland 
Melvin, John Grunsfeld and Jeff Hoffman. Spaceflight participant 
Richard Garriott, who traveled to the space station about a Soyuz, 
also attended.

Both winning efforts consisted of three teams. The teams that made up 
Alliance Rocket were Team Rocket, River Hill High School, 
Clarksville, Md.; Defending Champions, Storming Robots, Branchburg, 
N.J.; and SPHEREZ of Influence, Rockledge High School/Brevard County, 
Fla. Alliance CyberAvo consisted of CyberAvo, I.T.I.S. Amedeo 
Avogrado, Turin, Italy; Ultima, Kaethe Kollwitz Oberschule, Berlin, 
Germany; and Lazy, Heinrich Hertz Gymnasium, Berlin, Germany. A total 
of 36 teams participated in the SPHERES event. 

"It is just amazing to me what these high school students have 
accomplished," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said. "To program a 
robotic spacecraft with the precision of a NASA flight controller is 
quite a feat, but to have that ability, talent and discipline at such 
a young age is remarkable. Our future is in good hands." 

NASA sponsors the Zero Robotics SPHERES Challenge in partnership with 
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and MIT. The 
competition aligns with the agency's goal of encouraging students to 
study and pursue careers in science, technology, engineering and 
mathematics, or STEM.

The SPHERES National Laboratory is operated by NASA's Ames Research 
Center in Moffett Field, Calif.

For more about the Zero Robotics program, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/zero-robotics

For more information about SPHERES, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/experiments/SPHERES.html

For more information about the space station, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/station

	
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