[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next] - [Date Index][Thread Index][Author Index]
NASA Goddard Press Release
- Subject: [sarex] NASA Goddard Press Release
- From: "Frank H. Bauer" <fbauer@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 16 Dec 2000 12:24:20 -0500
All,
I thought I would share with you a NASA Goddard press release on the
upcoming first school group contact. All are invited to listen in on the
145.80 downlink.
73, Frank, KA3HDO
Caroline Harney
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone: 301/286-0040)
December 14, 2000
Release No. 00-145
Illinois Students To Make First Ham Radio Contact with Space Station
On December 19, 2000 at 3:59 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, students at the
Burbank School in Burbank, Illinois, will close their textbooks, put on
radio headsets, and use amateur radios to communicate with astronauts
aboard the International Space Station (ISS).
Located in a Chicago suburb, the Burbank K-8 school will be the first
school to use a ham radio to contact the Expediton1 crew aboard the ISS.
That crew -- Soyuz Commander Yuri Gidzenko, Expedition 1 Commander Bill
Shepherd and Flight Engineer Sergei Krikalev - were launched, Oct. 31,
2000, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and are the first
residents to live on board the space station.
Rita Wright, a teacher at the Burbank school and the project coordinator,
has been teaching science and math for thirty-one years in the southwest
Chicago suburb school district. "If you walked into our school today and
wandered down the halls, you would be surprised at the variety of topics,
activities, and displays of work all centered around the ISS mission,"
Wright proudly states. "Our school is vibrating with excitement and activity."
To prepare for the December 19th contact, first grade classes- created two
themes: "Flying High is Grade One," and "Adventures in Space." Second grade
classes- composed essays titled "Why I Want to be An Astronaut." The junior
high classes created power point presentations, slide-shows and simulated
models of future ISS stations. The entire student body (700 students)
developed questions and auditioned for the interview slots. Fourteen
students were selected and they are from the 1st, 2nd, 5th, 7th, and 8th
grades.
The seeds for this first-ever linkup were planted in 1996 when Rita Wright
discovered that ham radios were excellent teaching tools for eighth graders
interested in NASA and space exploration. In January 1996, Wright
completed the ARISS (Amateur Radio International Space Station)
application, and submitted an Educational Proposal to The American Radio
Relay League, hoping that amateur radio would attract eighth graders to
science. After four years, patience and a lot of hard work has finally paid
off for Wright and the students at the Burbank school.
Frank Bauer, chief of the Guidance, Navigation and Control Center at NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and the vice president for
the Radio Amateur Satellite Corporation's (AMSAT) human spaceflight
division, spearheaded the initial development effort to get the ham radio
on the space station. "The contact itself is just the tip of the iceberg,"
Bauer said. "Rita Wright's diligence for the past four years is remarkable.
She has kept NASA's team up to speed and has maintained the students'
interest. We at NASA are really excited this educational outreach
opportunity and we're even more excited about the enthusiasm of their
students."
Planning for the deployment and use of the ham system aboard ISS has been
an international effort coordinated by Goddard. The project began in 1996
with the formation of an organization called ARISS to design, build and
operate the equipment. ARISS is made up of delegates from major national
amateur radio organizations and from AMSAT.
Hams, as amateur radio operators are often called, use radio transmitters
and receivers to talk to other hams all over the globe, as well as those in
space. There are more than 1.5 million licensed hams worldwide, including
more than 660,000 Americans.
Radio amateurs must be licensed by the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC). In order to receive a license, a ham must pass an examination which
entails questions about radio theory, rules and regulations.
Hams around the world will be listening in on the Burbank school's call to
the ISS crew on the 19th. The contact will occur on the ISS amateur radio
downlink-- the 145.80 MHz public frequency.
For additional information about amateur radio contact and the Burbank
School ISS mission go to:
http://ariss.gsfc.nasa.gov/
For more about the International Space Station, visit:
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov
----
Via the sarex mailing list at AMSAT.ORG courtesy of AMSAT-NA.
To unsubscribe, send "unsubscribe sarex" to Majordomo@amsat.org
AMSAT Home