![]() Replays of the launch event and award ceremony are available on NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center YouTube page and the Student Launch Facebook page.įor more information about the Student Launch challenge, visit NASA's Student Launch website. with sponsorship from Teledyne Brown Engineering. The community event was organized by NASA and Downtown Huntsville, Inc. ![]() Additional support is provided by Northrup Grumman, National Space Club Huntsville, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, National Association of Rocketry, Relativity Space, Bastion Technologies and Siemens Digital Industries Software. Members of the AIAA Greater Huntsville Section attended Artemis on the Square, a celebration of NASA’s Artemis program in downtown Huntsville on Saturday, November 6th. Funding is provided in part by NASA’s Space Operations Mission Directorate and its Next Gen STEM project. Marshall Space Flight Center hosts Student Launch with management support provided by NASA’s Office of STEM Engagement - Southeast Region. "Student Launch is an authentic learning experience, one offering students experience working through the same processes NASA and our partners use for safety and quality control of space missions.” "Students are required to meet complex requirements and high expectations,” said Fred Kepner, an education program specialist and project coordinator for Student Launch at Marshall, in a press release. NASA in an online statement said the challenges help prepare it for human explorations of Mars. Student Launch is one of NASA’s nine Artemis Student Challenges activities, which combine student ingenuity with NASA’s work returning to the moon. “As NASA celebrates its 23rd year of Student Launch, we are proud to help develop the next generation of skilled engineers and explorers capable of supporting NASA’s Artemis missions.” “Our students share unique perspectives and design innovative technologies to address real-world difficulties of space exploration,” McGhaw said in a press release. He said the competition gives young thinkers the ability to develop new skills and channel their curiosity. Kevin McGhaw is the director of NASA's Office of STEM Engagement for the Southeast region. Still Image Students from New York University, in Brooklyn, showcase their rocket during NASA’s annual Rocket Fair April 13, near NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama. ![]()
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