NASA Announces Global Best in Class Winners for the International Space Apps Challenge

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May 22, 2013

Sonja Alexander 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1761 
sonja.r.alexander@xxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 13-152

NASA ANNOUNCES GLOBAL BEST IN CLASS WINNERS FOR THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE APPS CHALLENGE

WASHINGTON -- A panel of international judges from NASA, the European 
Space Agency (ESA), and other partner organizations has selected five 
"best in class" solutions as winners of the 2013 International Space 
Apps Challenge. 

The challenge, in which participants developed software, hardware, 
data visualization, and mobile or Web applications that contribute to 
space exploration missions and help improve life on Earth, took place 
at 83 locations around the world April 20-21. 

The winners are: 

-- Best Use of Data: Sol (Kansas City) 
Sol is the world's first interplanetary weather application. Users can 
select a planet and view the weather there, as they might view the 
weather on Earth by typing a postal code. The Sol team also built the 
Mars Atmospheric Aggregation System (MAAS) API, used to fuel several 
of the Mars weather applications produced during the challenge. 

-- Best Use of Hardware: ISS Base Station (Philadelphia) 
ISS Base Station is a hardware-software co-design project both 
expanding the Spot The Station Web app and allowing for a physical 
manifestation of its data. The software side of the project consists 
of a simple Web app that tracks the position of the International 
Space Station (ISS) in real time over a map of the world and connects 
to an augmented-reality iOS app that allows the user to find the 
station in the sky. The hardware side consists of a physical device 
that receives data from the app and points at the current location of 
the space station, lighting up when the station is within the user's 
area. 

-- Best Mission Concept: Popeye on Mars (Athens, Greece) 
Popeye on Mars is a deployable, reusable spinach greenhouse for Mars. 
Internally, a fully equipped aeroponic, or air garden, system 
operates for 45 days, having all the needed resources, sensors, and 
electronic systems to stabilize the internal environment and help the 
spinach grow. Also, there are systems for harvesting both the plants 
and the oxygen produced during the growth process. Photovoltaic 
panels provide power, while several cover layers protect the system 
against extreme Mars conditions. 

-- Galactic Impact: Greener Cities (Gothenburg, Sweden) 
The Greener Cities Project seeks to complement NASA satellite climate 
data with crowd-sourced microclimate data, providing higher 
resolution information for monitoring the environment. The design 
includes a low-cost garden monitoring sensor, aggregation and 
normalization of local environmental data, and scaling a global 
educational initiative for children to encourage interest in 
programming and the environment. 

-- Most Inspiring: T-10 (London) 
T-10 is a prototype mobile application for use on the International 
Space Station. Astronauts can program in specific points of interest 
they wish to photograph, and T-10 will alert them shortly before the 
station is set to fly over that location if the current weather 
permits photography. The app also can alert astronauts to interesting 
weather phenomena and upload photos directly to Twitter, as well as 
alert Earth-based users when the ISS will fly overhead. 

Social media users around the world joined the judging action to vote 
for their favorite projects. The solution with the most public votes, 
receiving the People's Choice Award, was ChicksBook. Developed in 
Sofia, Bulgaria, ChicksBook is a functional web, Android, and iOs 
application that can help the user learn how to raise chickens and 
manage the data for a backyard farm. 

During the event 770 solutions were submitted and 133 of those were 
nominated for global judging. Submissions had to include a two-minute 
video and be nominated by a local challenge lead to qualify for 
global judging. 

To learn more about the International Space Apps Challenge and recent 
winners, visit: 

http://spaceappschallenge.org 

For information about NASA's programs and missions, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov 

	
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