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Giving NASA a helping hand

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What can you do with a 110 foot wide, nine story tall radio telescope that weighs almost a million pounds? Not a question the average person or even educational institution asks themselves. Yet, this was a question Lewis Center founder Rick Piercy contemplated when he convinced NASA to donate a radio telescope being decommissioned that had once been used to communicate with Apollo spacecraft.

GAVRTsunrise

Thanks to Rick Piercy’s efforts K-12 students around the world have access to the Goldstone Apple Valley Radio Telescope through the Lewis Center’s GAVRT program which is a partnership with NASA offering a variety of programs exposing students to radio astronomy and cutting edge scientific work. Teachers from all institutions are welcome to join the program and are given a training seminar and visit to the telescope in order to familiarize themselves with the curriculum currently designed around the GAVRT as well as learn how to control the telescope via the internet.

In one of the ongoing projects students have been giving NASA scientists a helping hand track the Lunar CRater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) spacecraft with the GAVRT. The LCROSS mission is ongoing and the satellite is scheduled to make impact with the moon in order to look for water on October 9, 2009. One of the beauties of this program is that not only is this a unique learning opportunity for the students, but they also help provide additional data gathering time for NASA scientists as explained by Brian Day of the NASA Ames Research Center,

Because LCROSS has a very steeply inclined orbit, we have only a 2-hour window once every 3 days when we can check out the spacecraft using the Deep Space Network. So we decided to ask GAVRT for help. These kids help us get extra listening time for our spacecraft, and they get an incredible educational experience in return.

Thanks to the internet and some enterprising individuals some lucky students will have a front row seat to some exciting scientific exploration of our nearest celestial neighbor. I look forward to hearing about the results of the LCROSS mission. Congratulations guys!

Read more about GAVRT and the LCROSS mission.

Written by Anthony

September 28th, 2009 at 3:33 am

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