SpaceX Dragon to Carry 23 Student Experiments to Space Station

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Oct. 03, 2012

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


RELEASE: 12-347

SPACEX DRAGON TO CARRY 23 STUDENT EXPERIMENTS TO SPACE STATION

WASHINGTON -- Twenty-three microgravity experiments designed by 
participants of NASA's Student Spaceflight Experiment Program (SSEP) 
will become part of space history Oct. 7. They will be launched to 
the International Space Station aboard the SpaceX Dragon, the first 
commercially developed and built American spacecraft to fly a 
resupply cargo resupply mission to the station. 

Twelve of the SSEP experiments are getting a second flight 
opportunity. They were delivered to the space station on a SpaceX 
demonstration mission in May, but were not completed. The other 11 
experiments are new. 

Each experiment will study the effects of microgravity on physical, 
chemical and biological systems. The students have been immersed in 
every facet of research, from defining investigations to designing 
experiments, writing proposals, and submitting to a formal NASA 
review for selection of flight experiments. The 23 experiments 
represent more than 7,000 students and almost 2,000 proposals. 

"SSEP offers a unique flight opportunity that allows students to 
experience both the excitement and the challenges inherent in 
conducting research in a microgravity environment," said Roosevelt 
Johnson, deputy associate administrator for education at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington. "It really is STEM [science, technology, 
engineering and mathematics] in action, using the International Space 
Station -- which has America's only orbiting National Laboratory -- 
to host these students' science experiments." 

SSEP began in June 2010 as a cooperative venture by the National 
Center for Earth and Space Science Education (NCESSE) and NanoRacks 
LLC, a national STEM education initiative. The organizations work 
together to give hundreds of students across a community the 
opportunity to design and propose real experiments to fly in low 
Earth orbit. Teams submit formal flight experiment proposals, and a 
formal proposal review process selects the flight experiment for the 
community. A suite of programs leverages the flight experiment design 
competition to engage the entire community, including a mission patch 
art and design competition. 

SSEP payloads were flown in 2011 aboard space shuttles Endeavour and 
Atlantis on their respective STS-134 and STS-135 missions. The third 
round of experiments in May was the first to be conducted in orbit by 
space station astronauts. Next week's Dragon launch is the fourth 
flight opportunity. A fifth suite of experiments is scheduled for 
spring 2013. 

More than 100 SSEP students, teachers, and family members will travel 
to Florida to attend the SpaceX launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force 
Station. 
SSEP is one of many programs that use NASA's science and exploration 
missions to encourage students to pursue a STEM-centric school 
curriculum. NASA's Office of Education is committed to inspiring and 
developing the next generation of scientists and engineers through 
experiential, hands-on learning. 

To learn more about the SSEP, including future opportunities for 
student participation, visit: 


http://ssep.ncesse.org 

To learn more about NASA's education program, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/education 

To learn more about the International Space Station, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/station 

	
-end-



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