NASA TV Airs Live Kickoff of 2012 Zero Robotics Competition

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Sept. 7, 2012

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

MEDIA ADVISORY: M12-176

NASA TV AIRS LIVE KICKOFF OF 2012 ZERO ROBOTICS COMPETITION

WASHINGTON -- NASA Television will broadcast live the virtual kickoff 
ceremony of the 2012 Zero Robotics High School Tournament beginning 
at 1 p.m. EDT, Saturday, Sept. 8. 

Zero Robotics challenges teams of high school students to write their 
own algorithms to fly the Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, 
Reorient, Experimental Satellites, or SPHERES. The bowling ball-sized 
spherical satellites are used to test telerobotics and maneuvers for 
spacecraft performing autonomous flight, including rendezvous and 
docking. Three of these satellites fly aboard the International Space 
Station. Each is self-contained with power, propulsion, computing and 
navigation equipment. 

The kickoff will include welcoming talks from each of the tournament's 
sponsors, including NASA Administrator Charles Bolden. Alvar 
Saenz-Otero, associate director of the Space Systems Laboratory at 
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), will announce 
details of this year's specific challenge that students will work to 
overcome in their software development. 

This year's Zero Robotics tournament is sponsored by NASA and the 
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). The Space Systems 
Laboratory at MIT, TopCoder and Aurora Flight Sciences will 
facilitate the contest. The teams must address challenges of 
satellite docking, assembly and flight formation. This educational 
program builds critical engineering skills for students, such as 
problem solving, design thought process, operations training, 
teamwork and presentation skills. 

Teams that reach the finals will have their software programs 
installed on the SPHERES microsatellites aboard the space station. 
NASA astronauts will execute the student data commands in series of 
competitive heats to test the accuracy of each team's software 
programming. Teams will continue to be eliminated until a final 
champion is determined. The final competition will be held in January 
2013 at MIT and aboard the station, 250 miles above the Earth. 

There is no cost to participate in the Zero Robotics program, and 
registration for the 2012 Zero Robotics High School Tournament is 
open until Sept. 28. To register, visit: 

http://www.zerorobotics.org 

MIT's Space Systems Laboratory developed the SPHERES flight hardware 
to provide DARPA, NASA and other researchers with a long-term test 
bed for validating technologies critical to the operation of future 
satellites, docking missions and satellite autonomous maneuvers. 
Numerous organizations, including other government agencies and 
graduate student research groups have used SPHERES since the program 
began in 2006. The satellites provide opportunities to test a wide 
range of hardware and software at an affordable cost. 

For NASA TV streaming video, downlink and scheduling information, 
visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv 

For additional information on the Zero-Robotics program, visit: 

http://go.nasa.gov/RqbSTN 

	
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