search

UMD    CORE




Koscielniak, Sickenberger, and Benson receive their award

Koscielniak, Sickenberger, and Benson receive their award

 

Two Clark School aerospace engineering teams participated in NASA?s RASC-AL (Revolutionary Aerospace Systems Concept - Academic Linkage) Forum 2006 held in Cape Canaveral, Florida, May 21?25, 2006. This year?s theme was ?Space Exploration ? The Next Steps.? The university design projects addressed the utilization of NASA?s exploration architecture to perform potential future space missions.

The Clark School team of Agnieszka Koscielniak, Liz Benson, and Richard Sickenberger was awarded first place in the graduate division, beating six other teams: four entries from the Georgia Institute of Technology and one entry each from Carnegie-Mellon University and the University of Alabama-Huntsville. The Clark School team presented its design for a low-cost human spacecraft based on its term project in last fall?s ENAE 788D class. As part of the prize, they will receive a paid trip to present their paper and design at the International Astronautical Federation meeting in Valencia, Spain this October.

The members of the Clark School undergraduate team--Avi Chandra, Ashley Korzun, Meg Meehan, and Kevin Schoonover, representing the 36 students of ENAE 484-- presented that class?s project on modifying the International Space Station to create a rotating space station for partial-gravity biological studies. Although the Clark School team was among four schools very tightly grouped at the top of 14 undergraduate entries, the team was not awarded either of the two undergraduate prizes.

Aerospace engineering Professor Dave Akin, the Clark School?s RASC-AL faculty advisor and Director of the Space Systems Laboratory stated, ?Both teams did a really great job. I received a lot of compliments from NASA and industry people, and from the faculty advisors of other teams, for their innovation, technical competence, and professional presentation skills.?

The RASC-AL Forum provides an opportunity for student design teams to present research design projects to peers, representatives from NASA and industry.



Related Articles:
RASC-AL space design team honored by department

June 19, 2006


«Previous Story  

 

 

Current Headlines

From Composites to Competition: Grad Student Wins at Dance Championship

Reporters Brave Hurricane-Force Winds

UROC Interns Explore Counter UAS, VTOL

Two UMD Students Win Spots in SAMPE University Research Symposium

UMD Team Wins Spaceport America Cup

Designing for Moon Mission

Ph.D. Student Receives Best Paper Award at VFS 80th Annual Forum

Maryland Engineering: Top 10 Among Public Graduate Programs, Six Years Running

Roving Reporter

Students with Entrepreneurial Curiosity: Launch Your Business Idea at Maryland

 
 
Back to top  
CORE Home Clark School Home UMD Home Aerospace Engineering