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September
21, 2009: Using a colossal radio telescope in the
Mojave Desert, school kids around the world are helping NASA
track the LCROSS spacecraft as it heads for a crash landing
on the Moon.
On
Oct. 9th, LCROSS will smash into the inky-dark shadows of
a crater near the Moon's south pole in search of water. Eager
youngsters are locked on to LCROSS's signal as intently as
they've ever viewed a video game, and they're feeding NASA
valuable data about the spacecraft's health and status.
Students
attending 283 schools world-wide are participating in the
Goldstone Apple Valley Radio Telescope Project, or GAVRT --
a joint project between NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and
the Lewis Center for Educational Research. Boys and girls
control the behemoth telescope via the internet and they have
been learning how to do radio astronomy just like real mission
scientists.
Right:
The Goldstone Apple Valley Radio Telescope (GAVRT). [more]
Brian
Day of NASA Ames Research Center explains how the students
"adopted" LCROSS.
"Because
LCROSS has a very steeply inclined orbit, we have only a 2-hour
window once every 3 days when we can check out the spacecraft
using the Deep Space Network. So we decided to ask GAVRT for
help. These kids help us get extra listening time for our
spacecraft, and they get an incredible educational experience
in return."
Lewis
Center founder Rick Piercy is the visionary who sparked GAVRT's
creation, making this extraordinary hookup possible.
"In
1994, I heard that NASA was decommissioning a fully functional
radio telescope," says Piercy. "I knew that this
particular telescope had been used to communicate with the
Apollo spacecraft and realized that it was something special.
I wanted it for the students at our school, the Academy for
Academic Excellence. I figured we could load it up in a couple
of pickup trucks and bring it to the school if we could get
permission."
He
called California Congressman Jerry Lewis, who put him in
touch with then-NASA Administrator Daniel Goldin. Piercy convinced
Goldin and NASA to give the telescope to the school and make
the instrument available to students nationwide.
Right:
Students work alongside teachers and telescope operators in
the GAVRT control room. [video]
[transcript]
"I
contacted Dr. Michael Klein, who was a foremost authority
on Jupiter radio astronomy but has since passed away. When
I told him that I wanted to go load up the telescope in a
truck to bring to the school, he got very quiet and then said,
'The scope is 110 feet wide, weighs almost a million pounds,
and is 9 stories tall.'"
Piercy's
response? "Oh."
The
telescope stayed where it was, but that didn't stall Piercy's
plans. "Our school became the first to take over a NASA
telescope," he says. To date, 38,000 students, including
boys and girls at Department of Defense schools across the
globe, have run the telescope. NASA scientists and Lewis Center
staff train teachers. In turn, the teachers train groups of
students.
"Best
of all, the scientists mentor the students – answering questions
and offering guidance as needed."
According
to Piercy, one mother was a little worried at first, saying,
"I don't even let my daughter run the washing machine
-- and she's going to operate a 15 million dollar piece of
NASA equipment?"
No
worries, mom. It's all done remotely. Piercy never had to
test his pickup truck. Students access the massive radio telescope,
which resides at the Goldstone Tracking Station in California's
Mojave Desert, via the Internet in their classrooms.

Above:
Former GAVRT global programs director Dave MacLaren explains
how kids track LCROSS. Click
here for a video.
"Dr. Klein used to say that looking at a radio signal
on a screen was about as thrilling as watching the grass grow,"
says Piercy. "But the kids love it because they're participating
in real space missions and learning from NASA scientists what
those signals mean."
If
a problem occurs with LCROSS while NASA isn't able to listen,
students at one or more of the participating schools may know
it first and can alert the space agency.
"The
kids realize how important they are to the mission's success,"
says Piercy. "Besides, it's fun."
"I'm
really excited about being able to do this," says Anthony
Cole, a ninth grader at the Academy for Academic Excellence.
"It's a once in a lifetime opportunity to be able to
track a spacecraft looking to find water on the Moon."
Right:
GAVRT students attend the launch of LCROSS with Brian Day
(center) at the Kennedy Space Center. [larger
image]
"Kids
learn best by participating -- using all their senses,"
explains Piercy. "The proof's in the puddin'. The students
at our school have had the highest standardized high school
test scores in the county for several years now. Results for
this year aren't out yet, but we expect similar success."
Students,
including homeschoolers, who want to join in the fun can sign
up at LewisLearning.org.
There's room for everyone -- the Lewis Center is equipped
to handle more than 60 million students from anywhere in the
world. All you need is a speaker phone and a computer connected
to the Internet.
And
how's this for thrilling? There are plans in the works for
GAVRT students to help listen for communications from extraterrestrials.
"Is
there anybody out there?"
Yes.
38,000 clever kids hearing you loud and clear! Wassup?
Author: Dauna Coulter
| Editor:
Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA
|