Victory Primary School is taking on the ‘final frontier
For immediate release
15 February
2011
Nelson’s Victory Primary School is
taking on the ‘final frontier’ - space.
Using
amateur radio, twenty students will put pre-prepared
questions to astronauts on the International Space Station
(ISS).
Victory Primary School successfully applied
through the Amateur Radio on the International Space Station
(ARISS) programme to schedule contact with the in-orbit
crew. The ARISS programme is an educational tool designed to
stimulate the minds of young people in the fields of science
and technology.
School Board of Trustees Chair,
Helen Watson says it is a very exciting opportunity for the
students.
“Victory Primary School is a very culturally
diverse school with 29 nationalities and 26 languages,”
she says. “The Space Station reflects this diversity with
16 nationalities represented by the astronauts who have
lived there since 2000.”
The space station
travels at 27,000kph and orbits the earth sixteen times in a
24-hour period, so the maximum time it will be in range of
Nelson is 10 minutes. Because of this everything must be
precision timed, and a strict countdown checklist is
provided to the school to ensure everything goes
smoothly.
“We have twenty children who have
prepared questions, but we may not get through them all,”
Helen says.
Some examples of the kids’ questions
include: Can you look out the window right now and see our
school - do you have telescopes? Is space cold? How do you
clean yourself? Can plants grow in space?
Victory
School Volunteer Scott Smithline who instigated the project,
says the contact is scheduled for late morning on Friday 25
February, at the Victory Primary School hall, however Scott
says a variety of events may alter or postpone
it.
“It’s dependent on the launch of the Space
Shuttle Discovery on 24 February being on time, orbital
mechanics and any last minute changes to the on board crew
schedule, so we can’t make any
guarantees.”
The whole school will be in
attendance, plus invited guests.
Scott says this is
the final mission for Discovery, as NASA begins shifting
resources toward the Moon and Mars.
“If one child
is inspired by a few minutes of dialogue with an astronaut,
this whole exercise will have been a brilliant success,”
he
says.
Ends
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