- Preparing to Take Flight - Science@NASA
Conducting research in space is a complex endeavor: applying for funding, working with engineers to develop hardware, preparing and operating the experiment in space, analyzing data, and more
- Student Spaceflight Experiments Program - ISS National Lab
Student teams design a real experiment, propose for a real flight opportunity, experience a formal proposal review, and go through a NASA flight safety review
- Preparing to Go to Space Astronaut Training Student Projects . . .
From setting up a spacecraft simulator at home to doing zero-g training, here are some of the steps he took to prepare for this once-in-a-lifetime experience—and science projects students can do to explore how astronauts train
- Step4_nasatechrise2024-design-slides-balloon. pptx
Watch this sample TechRise experiment that was designed for a rocket flight Although this year’s flight is for a balloon, in this video you can see the size of a finished payload and how it is programmed to work in response to flight data
- Activities | How Things Fly
Discover for yourself the answers to things you've always wondered about flight Explore wing shapes and other factors affecting lift in How Wings Work, design and make your own Paper Airplane, take the Distance Challenge, and see the Forces of Flight in action
- Human Research Program Flight Experiment Information Package
Implementation of human life sciences research during space flight is limited by various resource constraints such as crew time (before, during, and after flight), up and down mass, and cold stowage Thus, experiments that require fewer of these resources will be more feasible to implement
- Aerodynamics Science Projects: Planes, Rockets, Kites, Drones More
Explore aerodynamics with science projects related to planes, helicopters, drones, rockets, and more! Students interested in the science of flight or the design of things like planes, rockets, and helicopters, can experiment with science projects like the ones highlighted below
- Microsoft Word - ISS2-ProposalGuide-BackgroundForStudents. docx
What better way than to provide students the opportunity to design and propose real microgravity experiments, with one selected from your community to launch to the International Space Station (ISS) and be conducted by an astronaut?
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