Release Date: March 23,
2009
Contact: Kelly Downs, RIT or Jenna Maddix, NASA’s Johnson Space Ctr.
(585) 475-5094 or (281) 483-5111
or kaduns@rit.edu <mailto:kaduns@rit.edu>
RIT Students Fly High
for
Weightless Science Aboard NASA’s ‘Vomit Comet’
A team of RIT Imaging and Photo Technology students
are among select group of collegiate teams selected for program
NASA has selected a team of four students from Rochester
Institute of
Technology to fly a scientific experiment while achieving
weightlessness similar to astronauts in space.
The space agency chose the students to participate in its Reduced
Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program, which allows
undergraduate students to research, design, test, fly and evaluate a
reduced gravity experiment.
In April, Alexandra Artusio-Glimpse, Ross Dawson, Eric Evans and Bryan
Zaczek, all part of the imaging and photographic technology program in
RIT’s College of Imaging Arts and Sciences, will look at the
feasibility of inkjet printing in a microgravity environment.
“We will study the effects of microgravity on ink drops from an inkjet
printer,” says Eric Evans, RIT student team leader and a fourth-year
imaging and photographic technology major. “Our research will build on
the findings of the RIT student team that flew in July 2008. They
determined that inkjet printheads can operate in microgravity. Inkjet
technologies have been used in applications including circuit board
printing, biomedical research and three-dimensional prototyping. High
precision drop placement is necessary for these scientific applications
and we hope our research will benefit work in such fields.”
Other top universities such as Yale, Purdue and Ohio State will also
send up student teams to fly.
The teams perform their experiments during a roller coaster-like ride
aboard a modified Boeing 727. Nicknamed the “Vomit Comet,” the plane
flies a series of choreographed maneuvers known as parabolas to achieve
brief periods of microgravity. Throughout the flight, participants
experience approximately 30 “steep hill climbs and freefalls” achieving
near-weightlessness 25 seconds at a time. These moments of microgravity
are similar to what astronauts experience in spaceflight.
“It is today’s students that will go back to the moon and beyond to
live, explore and work,” says Douglas Goforth, Reduced Gravity Student
Flight Opportunities Program manager at NASA’s Johnson Space Center.
“This project gives them a head start in preparing for those future
ventures by allowing them to conduct hands-on research and engineering
in a reduced gravity environment.”
In addition to the student-based research, teams will participate in at
least two Digital Learning Network events (videoconferences) to work in
conjunction with other NASA and engineering organizations.
For more information about the Reduced Gravity Flight Opportunities
Program, visit http://microgravityuniversity.jsc.nasa.gov
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