Friday, April 26, 2013

Students and Space Hacker Workshop

There is still room to attend the Space Hacker Workshop, May 4-5, at the Hacker Dojo, in Mountain View.  Registration is at:  http://spacehacker.eventbrite.com.

IF YOU ARE A STUDENT, you can enter the promotional code "studentinspace" and get a 50% discount.  HOWEVER, you must be prepared to show your current valid student ID card when you show up.

The early bird discount is no longer in effect.  Until May 1, the registration fee is $125 + $7.87 processing fee.  For students, this means the current rate for the two days is something like $66.93.  (It didn't just divide by 2.  There must be a base credit card fee.)  This includes coffee, snacks, and lunch on both days.

In addition to the hands-on sessions using the Ardulab module, here is the current list of speakers:

  • Entrepreneurial spaceflight start-ups
Sean Casey, Silicon Valley Space Center
  • Citizen astronauts, flight selection and training
Edward Wright, Citizen Science
  • The XCOR Lynx vehicle
Khaki Rodway, XCOR
  • Microgravity and biological experiments
Oana Marcu, NASA ARC/SETI
  • Protein crystal growth in a micro-gravity environment
  • Lunar Mining
Jim Kerevala, Shackleton Energy
  • 3D Printing
Jason Dunn,  MadeInSpace
  • Open Sourcing Space Technologies
Darlene Damm, Open Space University
  • Mesospheric Science
Jason Reimuller, Astronauts4Hire
  • New Space and Synthetic Biology
John Cumbers, NASA/USRA

Thursday, April 18, 2013

PoSSUM - TechTalk - Apr 22


How can manned suborbital vehicles support science in the upper atmosphere?  We will get an example of this in our next TechTalk, on Monday, April 22.  Jason Reimuller, prinicipal investigator on PoSSUM, will describe the project.  Below is the first part of the abstract on the TechTalks webpage for the talk.

The Polar Suborbital Science in the Upper Mesosphere (PoSSUM) campaign will employ a manned reusable suborbital vehicle that will launch from a high-latitude spaceport (e.g. Alaska or Kiruna, Sweden) during a weeklong deployment scheduled for July 2014 to study numerous aspects of Polar Mesospheric Clouds (PMCs).  PoSSUM will optimize the opportunity created by the “PMC  Imagery and Tomography Experiment”, a high-latitude campaign selected by the NASA Flight Opportunities Program (Experiment 46-S) to study the small-scale dynamics of PMCs.  The PoSSUM Project will make full use of the 46-S opportunity by fully utilizing all available payload space and campaign deployment time to optimize technology maturation and science return while validating a repeatable, low-cost means to study seasonal trends of PMCs.

The manned suborbital spacecraft referenced is the XCOR Lynx, which is currently being completed in Mojave, California.  This is a chance to learn about this PMC phenomena as well as what it's like to work with the NASA Flight Opportunities Program.  The TechTalks webpage lists some additional links to resources, including a 2-page summary PDF of the project.

Monday, April 8, 2013

AIAA SF Southern California Tour 2013

Dear Members of AIAA San Francisco,

Your local council is pleased to invite you on a tour of aerospace sights in Southern California from September 18-21, 2013! Please consider the following:


Wednesday, Sept 18: the group will meet at 3pm in Mountain View, drive in 15-person vans to Hawthorne, and stay in a hotel

Thursday, Sept 19: tour SpaceX and a TBD aerospace site, stay in Hawthorne

Friday, Sept 20: drive to Pasadena for a tour of Jet Propulsion Lab, stay in Pasadena

Saturday, Sept 21: drive to Mojave, tour aerospace facilities, return to Mountain View by 9pm


The tour is going to be a great opportunity to visit some of our finest spacecraft makers and form bonds between the San Francisco and Los Angeles aerospace communities. The trip costs $200 per person, which includes van rentals, gas, and hotels. Hotel rooms will be determined by those who wish to attend, as this would be a great trip to bring along your spouse. We must restrict participants to US citizens only. Also, there is only limited space available so RSVP soon!

Please RSVP to ricetoldi@gmail.com by June 30th. Thank you for your time, we hope to hear from you.

Sincerely,
AIAA - SF Council


Sunday, April 7, 2013

AIAA-SF STEM Event Tomorrow!

Hello San Francisco Section,

The STEM Committee is organizing an amazing "Day at the Museum" at the new Exploratorium location, see flyer for more info.

This is an event for families and for friends, bring K-12 students to be part of this GREAT event!!!!



Have an amazing week!

Magaly Gonzalez Sipperley
AIAA-SF STEM K-12 Director
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Webpages:  www.aiaa.org/ | http://www.aiaa-sf.org/

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Space Hacker Workshop - May 4-5

SVSC/Citizens in Space Workshop
San-Sun, May 4-5, 2013
Hacker Dojo, Mountain View


A Space Hacker Workshop for Suborbital Experiments will take place at the Hacker Dojo, directly across from NASA Ames Research Center, May 4-5.  Participants will learn how to build and fly experiments in space aboard the XCOR Lynx in a 10-flight program managed by Citizens in Space.  The program will accomodate up to 100 CubeLab experiments.

The program announcement was picked up by Scientific American, and appears in their Citizen Science section.  The announcement appears in full on sites like SpaceRef.com, and appears below. Registration is $100 before April 18, and will be $150 at the door.

Press release at SpaceRef.com and other sources below...

Are you a hardware hacker? Do you have the Right Stuff to become a citizen scientist or citizen astronaut? Here's your chance to find out.

Citizen scientists and hardware hackers will learn how to do "space on the cheap" at the first Space Hacker Workshop for Suborbital Experiments. Participants at the two-day workshop will learn how they can build and fly experiments in space, and even fly in space as citizen astronauts, through the Citizens in Space program.

The Space Hacker Workshop takes place May 4-5 at the Hacker Dojo in Mountain View, California, across the street (literally) from NASA Ames Research Center. The workshop is sponsored by Citizens in Space, a project of the United States Rocket Academy, and the Silicon Valley Space Center.

Citizens in Space has purchased 10 flights on the XCOR Lynx spacecraft, now under construction at the Mojave Air and Space Port, which will be made available to the citizen-science community.

"We're looking for 100 citizen-science experiments and 10 citizen astronauts to fly as payload operators," Citizens in Space project manager Edward Wright said. "This is a chance for citizen scientists to develop and test new technologies, like bioreactors and 3D printing, in zero gravity; to collect microorganisms from the extreme upper atmosphere; to experiment with new processes for creating new materials; and do many more cool things. The Space Hacker Workshop will provide participants with information and skills needed to take advantage of our free flight opportunities."

"Space is no longer the exclusive domain of NASA and university scientists," said Dr. Sean Casey, co-founder of the Silicon Valley Space Center. "Citizen scientists can build and fly fully functioning experiments for a few hundred dollars or less, thanks to technology developed here in Silicon Valley. With components available at Radio Shack or Fry's Electronics, citizen scientists can build instruments and experiments with more power than a NASA satellite from a few years back."

"Commercial spaceflight is the next high-tech revolution, making space a participatory frontier," said Dr. Alexander Saltman, executive director of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation. "This event will tap into the creative spirit that has made Silicon Valley a center of innovation for decades."

The Space Hacker Workshop will provide hands-on exposure to a variety of microcontrollers, sensors, imaging systems, and other components. With these components, participants will learn how to design and build microgravity, fluid-physics, life-science, and engineering experiments.

Infinity Aerospace, which is developing the open-source ArduLab for low-cost space experiments, will be on hand to discuss the use of ArduLab hardware as a development platform. Also on hand will be representatives of XCOR Aerospace, which is building the fully reusable Lynx suborbital spacecraft, and NASA Ames Research Center.

Khaki Rodway of XCOR Aerospace will discuss the capabilities and requirements of the Lynx spacecraft. A panel of experts from NASA and industry will discuss research professional scientists have done in the past, prospects for new research on low-cost vehicles such as the Lynx, and opportunities for citizen scientists to build on the shoulders of NASA giants.

Project manager Edward Wright will be on hand to discuss Citizens in Space flight opportunities for experiments and citizen astronauts, including an exclusive glimpse at citizen-astronaut training activities planned for this summer.

Admission for the event is $150 at the door, but early-bird tickets are available now for $100. Tickets are limited and the event may sell out. Online registration is available at http://spacehacker.eventbrite.com.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Day at the Museum - May 11

Hello San Francisco Section,

The STEM Committee is organizing an amazing "Day at the Museum" at the new Exploratorium location.

When: Saturday May 11th, 2013

Where:

Exploratorium
15/17 Pier
San Francisco, CA 94111

Time: 10:00am
Cost: TBD


This is an event for families and for friends, bring students from K-12 to be part of this GREAT event!!!!

STAY TUNED FOR MORE INFO TO COME!!!!

Have an amazing week!

Magaly Gonzalez Sipperley
AIAA-SF STEM K-12 Director
American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics
Webpages:  www.aiaa.org/ | http://www.aiaa-sf.org/