|
RETURN
TO
NEWS SUMMARY
EKU
HOME PAGE
WHAT'S
HOT?
NEWS
ARCHIVES
PHOTO
GALLERY
PUBLIC
RELATIONS
AND MARKETING
|
|
When the Space
Shuttle Columbia exploded over the Texas skies the morning of Feb. 1,
seven
Eastern Kentucky University students felt like they had lost members
of their own family.
And, in a very real sense, they had.
A group of seven Eastern chemistry majors joined the NASA family when
it learned in December that its proposed research project had been accepted
as part of NASA's Reduced
Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program.
EKU's Space Technology Research Team, under the supervision of Dr.
Lori Wilson, will take its Multiplanar Microgravity Mixing project
into the skies near the Johnson Space Center in Houston July 24-Aug.
2.
Members of the team are Amanda Brown, senior, Herndon; John Clemens,
senior, Elizabethtown; Clayton Hall, graduate student, Lexington; Kena
Lanham, junior, Owensboro; Greg Myers, senior, London; Sid Norwitz,
freshman, North Kingstown, R.I.; and Wesley Penn, junior, Lexington.
Dr. Carolyn Harvey, a faculty member in EKU's Department of Environmental
Health, will assist with the project, and a Boeing engineer will serve
as technical adviser.
Nationwide, 71 teams were chosen from 160 applicants. EKU was selected
for Flight Group 6, along with 11 other institutions, including Arizona
State, California Institute of Technology, Harvard, Oregon State, the
University of Washington and West Virginia University.
"This is what I call active learning," Wilson said. "They
came up with the idea and had to figure out how to do it. The project
has integrated and broadened their education."
The team has been split into fliers and ground crew. After several days
of preparation at the Johnson Space Center, the fliers will board a
KC-135A research plane for two flights over the Gulf of Mexico that
each provide approximately 25 seconds of zero-gravity conditions in
which to conduct the experiment.
"If we're studying chemical reactions in microgravity situations,
we need to be sure the results are due to the microgravity environment
and not how it was mixed," said Hall.
In order study and use chemical reactions in microgravity, Wilson explained,
understanding and facilitating mixing is essential.
The agitation device developed by the team uses centrifugal force in
two planes.
"Our general hypothesis is that multiplanar mixing in microgravity
evenly disperses chemical reagents throughout a sealed fluid
vessel," Wilson said.
The students agreed that the project calls them to apply knowledge from
several subject
areas, including physics, chemistry and math.
"And we're learning how to work as a group," Brown said, "how
to strategize, plan, research and delegate."
The fliers are Brown, Clemens, Lanham and Myers, with Norwitz as an
alternate. Hall, Penn, Wilson and Harvey comprise the ground crew.
The final component of the project calls for the team to talk about
its research in presentations to campus and local K-12 school groups.
The NASA attachment has provided extra motivation for the students,
according to Wilson.
"There's a lot of enthusiasm and excitement about the space program,"
she said. "It keeps me going."
|