GRC NEWS RELEASE 00-041
00-041a
For Release: July 27, 2000
Barbara L. Kakiris/Lori J. Rachul
Media Relations Office
(216) 433-2513/(216) 433-8806
Robert D. Allen
NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA
(757) 864-6176
Jerry Berg
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL
(256) 544-6540
Patricia K. Hunt
Hathaway Brown School, Cleveland, OH
(216) 397-0799
Susan Mather
Air Force Material Command, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, OH
(937) 255-1103
Beverly A. Weiss
Boeing Phantom Works, Seattle, WA
(253) 773-0923
Local All Girls' High School Students "Suit Up" with NASA Glenn
for Space Station Experiment
A group of high school girls
wearing lab coats in a clean room works on an experiment to board the
International Space Station (ISS)-sound like science fiction? It's
not, thanks to the first-ever collaboration between NASA Glenn
Research Center and the local all girls' Hathaway Brown School,
Shaker Heights, OH, who are conducting an experiment to fly aboard
the ISS in June 2001.
The girls are working closely with Glenn researchers to finalize 41
samples for the Project Materials International Space Station
Experiment (MISSE). In the experiment, different polymer materials
will be exposed to atomic oxygen and solar radiation (ultraviolet and
x-ray radiation) for a year and then returned to the project team for
analysis to carefully determine their atomic oxygen durability.
The students were invited to participate in project MISSE as an
extension of the original Glenn/Hathaway Brown collaboration in the
Polymer Erosion And Contamination Experiment (PEACE), which is a
space shuttle Get Away Special can experiment that intends to measure
the atomic oxygen durability of a wide variety of polymers with
potential space applications, and to validate a method for
identifying sources of silicone contamination that occur on
spacecraft in low Earth orbit.
"I was thrilled to invite the Hathaway Brown girls to work with me on
the Space Station experiment because it gives them hands-on
experience with flight samples," said Kim K. de Groh, principal
investigator for the PEACE polymers experiment on Project MISSE.
"Flying the same polymers as our PEACE shuttle flight experiment on
Project MISSE provides a unique opportunity for long-term
space-flight data. The science is truly of interest to the space
community."
The group chose the same 41 materials planned for use in the PEACE
experiment for Project MISSE so that both short-term and long-term
exposure tests, respectively, will be available for the same
materials. These polymers have wide chemical structure variation and
the data to be generated is already of interest to a group of
Canadian researchers who are modeling polymers' atomic oxygen
durability.
Since the spring of 1998, eight Hathaway Brown students on the team
combined have spent over 80 weeks at Glenn doing labwork and working
out project details assigned by de Groh as well as Glenn team members
Bruce A. Banks, PEACE project scientist and Edward A. Sechkar,
project engineer. The team (comprised of girls in grades 9-12)
conducts work year-round. As team members leave for college, they are
replaced by underclassmen. Activities completed include
characterizing, with extreme precision and accuracy, the different
materials selected for flight and preparing actual flight samples.
Their work develops or improves characterization techniques for
sample evaluation.
"The professionals at NASA Glenn have been amazingly generous with
their time and knowledge. They treat the students as true
professionals in this long-term collaborative experiment, which will
probably last seven years," said Patricia K. Hunt, director, Hathaway
Brown Student Research Program and PEACE team member. "They agree
with Hathaway Brown that the best way to prepare bright young people
to become the leaders of the future in science and technology is to
give them experiences like these today."
Project MISSE is a materials flight experiment sponsored by the
Materials and Manufacturing Directorate of the Air Force Research Lab
at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base and the NASA Space Environmental
Effects Program at Marshall Space Flight Center. Project MISSE is a
cooperative effort among the Air Force, NASA and industry that is
currently undergoing initial integration at Boeing, NASA Marshall
Space Flight Center and NASA Langley Research Center. The girls'
project is one of 28 submitted by students from Ohio, Indiana and
Kentucky under Project MISSE.
Hathaway Brown is the fourth largest independent girls' school in the
country. Its partnership with Glenn is part of its innovative Student
Research Program, in which students conduct research on cutting-edge
topics under the mentorship of supervising professionals at local
research or academic institutions or businesses.
For more information on Hathaway Brown School, please visit:
//chandra.etouch.net/centers/grc=/centers/grc://www.hb.edu
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Editor's note: Photos related to this story are available at:
www.nasa.gov/centers/glenn/news/pressrel/2000/00-041addm.html
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