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VA3SED > NASA     01.12.01 15:41l 109 Lines 4375 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
BID : 41412_VA3SED
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Subj: ANTICIPATE SHUTTLE MISSION
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Sent: 011127/1244Z @:VA3SED.#SWON.ON.CAN.NA #:41412 [Baden] FBB7.00g
From: VA3SED@VA3SED.#SWON.ON.CAN.NA
To  : NASA@CANADA


Sonja Alexander
Headquarters, Washington           Nov. 26, 2001
(Phone: 202/358-1761)

Keith Koehler
Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, Va.
(Phone: 757/824-1579)

RELEASE: 01-234

STUDENTS WORLDWIDE ANTICIPATE NEXT SHUTTLE MISSION

     Students in schools worldwide from first grade to 
undergraduates are anticipating with excitement the next 
space shuttle mission, scheduled for launch Thursday, as 
their experiments venture into space.

The Space Shuttle Small Payloads Project (SSPP), based at the 
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and Wallops 
Flight Facility, Wallops Island, Va., is providing flight 
opportunities for nearly 40 experiments designed to engage 
students in space and scientific exploration.

"Providing students the experience of being scientific 
investigators using the microgravity environment provided by 
the space shuttle reinforces their understanding of science, 
mathematics and technology," said Frank Owens, Director, 
Education Division, NASA Headquarters, Washington. "And it is 
this learning experience that can spark an interest and lead 
them toward a career in science or engineering."

The most noticeable of the educational experiments on STS-108 
is the Student Tracked Atmospheric Research Satellite for 
Heuristic International Networking Experiment (STARSHINE-2).  
STARSHINE is an education program for students around the 
world to help construct a satellite and learn about satellite 
orbits and natural events that affect these orbits.

To be deployed after the shuttle undocks from the 
International Space Station, the beach ball-size satellite is 
covered with nearly 900 aluminum mirrors that have been 
polished by nearly 25,000 students around the world. The 
satellite should be visible from Earth with the naked eye. 

Through the six-month lifetime of the satellite, students 
will be able to track its position, visually observe it at 
twilight hours, calculate orbits, measure changes in the 
orbit and observe the effect of solar activity on the orbit.

Rocky Mountain NASA Space Grant Consortium, Salt Lake City, 
is sponsoring the project, the third in the STARSHINE series. 
The first was deployed during a 1999 shuttle mission and the 
second was launched from Alaska in September 2001.

Three organizations -- Utah State University, Logan; 
Pennsylvania State University, State College; and the 
Argentine Association of Space Technology, Argentina -- are 
flying Get-Away-Special canisters that include experiments 
that engage area students in space research. These 
experiments include the development of a low-cost and 
reusable plant-growth chamber; examination of the effects of 
the space environment on crystal growth, popcorn and seeds; 
and a water purification process.

NASA also will fly three Space Experiment Module (SEM) 
payloads carrying 30 experiments designed by students from 
throughout the United States, Argentina, Morocco and 
Portugal, and Australia. In addition, STS-108 will mark the 
fifth anniversary of the flight of the first SEM on STS-80 in 
November 1996.

Three of these experiments were developed by high school 
students in Maryland, Illinois and Washington and were 
selected for flight through the NASA Student Involvement 
Program. These experiments will study the affect of 
microgravity on brine shrimp and their use as a food source 
for fish during long-duration space missions; examine three-
dimensional resonance modes in microgravity and the 
relationship to structures made for the microgravity 
environment; and research how electrical currents flow in the 
space environment.

Another experiment will bridge generations as students from 
New Oxford Elementary School have teamed with residents at 
the Brethren Home Retirement Community, both in Hanover, Pa. 
The groups will examine how the space environment affects the 
growth of soy seeds.

In addition to the educational experiments, a number of other 
experiments will be flown that include examining smoldering 
combustion in microgravity, testing prototype instrument 
coolers for space flight and investigating planetary dust 
rings.

A complete list and descriptions of SSPP experiments on STS-
108 can be found at:
                    http://www.wff.nasa.gov

                            -end-
73, de Tedd





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