WOU Students to fly for NASA in July
Five students from Western Oregon University have
been chosen by NASA to test their science
experiments while floating aboard the agency's
famous "Weightless Wonder"; aircraft. These
adventurous students include Amanda Martin
(Corvallis), Avery Cotton (Beaverton), William
Bowers (Klamath Falls), Ronald Wessels (Rogue
River), and Debbie Clark (Dayton).
Each year, the Reduced Gravity Student Flight
Opportunities Program at NASA’s Johnson Space
Center in Houston gives undergraduate student
teams the opportunity to research, design,
fabricate, fly and evaluate a reduced gravity
experiment. The student teams follow much
the same path as scientists who develop experiments
that fly in space.
This
year, 50 teams have been selected to test
their designs during a roller coaster-like
ride that produces brief periods of microgravity,
similar to what astronauts experience during
spaceflight. A NASA C-9 aircraft, the military
version of a McDonnell Douglas DC-9 jet airliner,
flies a series of carefully choreographed
maneuvers to achieve this effect. Students
will experience how the human body reacts
during the 30 “hill climbs and freefalls”
on each flight that create weightlessness
25 seconds at a time.
The
WOU student team will fly during July, and
will test their Physics Feasibility Test of
a Rotating Fluidized Bed Space Reactor experiment.
This experiment will determine the rotational
velocity necessary for critical particle fluidization
in microgravity and compare experimental results
with computer-generated models. Three months
after their flights, the team is expected
to issue a final report to include their scientific
findings, analysis of the experiment’s effectiveness,
and conclusions drawn from the findings. The
long-term goals of the experiment are to ensure
the sustainability of both the Western Oregon
and Oregon State University Microgravity Flight
Teams. In addition the team plans to develop
several permanent outreach programs within
the state of Oregon to (a) encourage youth
to pursue careers in science, math, engineering,
and education, (b) increase space flight awareness
in the general public, and (c) increase Earth
awareness in the general public.