Ann Marie Trotta
Headquarters, Washington
Rachel Kraft
In its second year, the program offers students in fifth through eighth grades an opportunity to design experiments or simple demonstrations for testing both in the classroom and in the station's microgravity environment.
A team of representatives from NASA centers selected the winners from among 62 proposals. The experiments will study the effect of weightlessness on various subjects and show what the environment reveals about the laws of physics.
"This is a wonderful opportunity for these students to learn how scientists and astronauts work together to develop new technologies for space exploration and to learn more about how things work on Earth," said Mark Severance, International Space Station National Laboratory Education projects manager at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston . "By engaging students in interesting science experiments, teachers can pique a child's interest while helping develop higher-level thinking skills."
The winning experiments came from students at these schools:
-- Chabad Hebrew Academy in San Diego , for "Attracting Water Drops." This experiment will determine if a free-floating water drop can be attracted to a static charged rubber exercise tube.
-- Neighborhood After School Science Association in Ava , N.Y. , for "Flight of Paper Rockets Launched by Air Cannon." This experiment will determine the direction and distance traveled by a paper air rocket launched in microgravity.
-- Key Peninsula Middle School in Lakebay , Wash. , for "Pondering the Pendulum." This experiment will examine the effects of microgravity on a pendulum.
-- Potlatch Elementary in Potlatch, Idaho , for "Pepper Oil Surprise." This experiment will investigate the interaction of liquid pepper/oil and water in a plastic bag in microgravity.
-- Gate of Heaven School in Dallas , Pa. , for "Buoyancy in Space." This experiment will determine if the buoyancy of an object is affected in a microgravity environment.
-- Will James Middle School in Billings , Mont. , for "A Comparison of Dispersion of Liquid Pepper under Microgravity and Earth Conditions." This experiment will compare the dispersal of liquid pepper in microgravity to Earth's gravity.
The apparatus for the experiments was constructed using the same materials as in a tool kit provided to astronauts on the space station. The materials in the kit are commonly found in the classroom and used for science demonstrations. The experiments will take no more than 30 minutes to set up, run and take down.
For more information about Kids in Micro-G, visit http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/research/nlab/experimentchallenge.html.
For more information about NASA's education programs, visit http://www.nasa.gov/education.
For more information about the International Space Station, visit http://www.nasa.gov/station.
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