Testing a student project in the real world is one thing. Sending a project out of the world to test it, as these female aerospace students, did is something else.
Science & Technology - Space 
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Space Features
Science Study Break looks at Star Trek
In this installment of Science Study Break, Professor Glenn Lightsey tackles...
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Europa’s “chaos terrain”
In a significant finding in the search for life beyond Earth, scientists from The...
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Black holes and starry skies
Astronomers 'weigh' largest known black hole in our cosmic neighborhood
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FASTRAC satellites survive orbit
Watch an animation of Emma and Sara Lily, two student-built satellites that were...
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The first Longhorn in space …
Sam, a Rhesus monkey, was launched on Dec. 4, 1959. He and Miss Sam, launched a month...
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This is so cool! What an incredible project to undertake and accomplish! Fantastic work!
Are you intending to see how they fly--in a Hardware in the Loop Lab? You can probably design and perfect some usable flight software, and simulate flight conditions. Are you going to report your test results in some scholarly journal? Which was the best IMU? Would you assign certain gyros or accelerometers to particular axes? Do you have some sisters assigned to develop a WIALD (or something like that) rocket? Do you have some sisters working on