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Sun, May 20, 2007

Team America Rocketry Challenge This Weekend

Top 100 Teams Compete In World's Largest Rocket Contest

By the end of Saturday, the winning team of the Team America Rocketry Challenge will have been named, having successfully designed, built, and flown a model rocket carrying one hen egg and returning it safely (uncracked) to the ground while staying aloft for exactly 45 seconds and reaching an altitude of exactly 850 feet.

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates was scheduled to make an appearance during the award ceremony following the contest and hand out the first-place trophy to this year's winner.

Other guests scheduled to join Gates included four former astronauts: Jay Apt; Scott "Doc" Horowitz, a current NASA associate administrator; Ron Sega, the current undersecretary of the Air Force; and Buzz Aldrin. Also attending are other leaders from the Defense Department, NASA, FAA, and representatives from foreign embassies.

Held in The Plains, VA, the national model rocket competition for US high school and middle school students offers a grand prize pool of over $60,000 in scholarships and cash to be shared by the winning teams. Some 690 teams, made up of three to 15 students, participated in the earlier events, with the top 100 teams at the final competition in The Plains.

Team America Rocketry Challenge 2007 is sponsored by the Aerospace Industries Association and the National Association of Rocketry, with co-sponsorship by NASA, the Defense Department, the American Association of Physics Teachers, and 38 AIA member companies.

The event was originally created as a one-time event to celebrate the 100th anniversary of flight, but AIA opted to hold it annually after receiving hundreds of requests from students, teachers, and parents. This year marks the fifth year of the Team America Rocketry Challenge.

The event is aimed at attracting young people to study science, math, and other high technology-related subjects. The aerospace and defense workforce is facing a shortage of skilled employees in coming years and is encouraging students to consider studying aerospace fields in college.

The process of designing, building, and flying a moderately-complex flight vehicle teaches concepts of teamwork; physics and engineering, including aerodynamics, flight mechanics and stability; and electrical circuitry for the ignition system. The process of vehicle optimization for a performance goal also teaches engineering design and tradeoffs.

The goal for the teams is to fly a hand-made rocket as close as possible to 850 feet in altitude and 45 seconds in duration. The rockets carry a raw egg payload that must return to the ground un-cracked to qualify as a valid flight. Scores are based on deviations from the altitude and time goals, so a perfect mark would be zero.

The day's events included opening ceremonies with a military fly over and a high powered rocket launch; student rocket launches every hour; a launch by the winning team from the UK rocketry challenge; a demonstration of large high-powered rockets by the National Association of Rocketry; interactive displays and simulators from NASA and the Department of Defense; and exhibits from several university engineering and aerospace programs and other educational programs.

FMI: www.rocketcontest.org; www.aia-aerospace.org/aianews/features/team_america

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