Contact Victor Williamson with your questions about simulator based experiential education programs for your school.
SpaceCampUtah@gmail.com

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Pegasus takes NuSTAR to orbit

 

Nose of the Pegasus rocket, with bulbous arm on top. Viewed from the carrier aircraft, the arm holds the rocket in place underneath the fuselage.

At about 10:00 am MDT this morning, NASA's NuSTAR satellite was dropped suddenly from the belly of an L1011 wide-bodied jet. Moments later the Pegasus XL rocket motor ignited, and the rocket soared up into the dark sky.
Ten a.m.? Dark sky? Well, this launch was not your typical launch. The rocket was lifted up from the Kwajalein Island runway in the pacific, while it was still dark in the early morning hours. Operations were broadcast on NASATV on UStream. The operation was managed by Orbital Sciences Corporation. Like SpaceX, Orbital is a private company making its way into space with innovative new technologies. This is not the first flight of the Pegasus, but it's use to place the NuSTAR into orbit is making news this morning.

Computer rendering of Pegasus lifting towards space.

The Lockheed L-1011 jet, designated Stargazer, lifted off about an hour before fropping the rocket. After a fall of about 5 seconds, the Pegasus blasted off toward orbit. Thirteen minutes later the NuSTAR satellite separated. NASA's TDRS tracking system soon was receiving signals from the spacecraft. Engineers will check out the systems for a week before sending the signal for the equipment to deploy.

Computer image of NuSTAR deployed.

NuSTAR is an unusual-looking spacecraft. It houses a special high-energy X-Ray telescope. When the command is given, the lens section will extend on a framework out to 10 meters. NuSTAR will discover and explore black holes, as well as galaxy clusters and super-dense dead stars. Mission control for the NuSTAR operation will be located at Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL).


Mission Control screen during launch. The Pegasus is boosting the NuSTAR, 
at the very left lower corner.


By Mark Daymont
Space Center Educator

Monday, June 11, 2012

Camp Survey Results, and Other Things.



From the Institute of Incomplete Surveys


Hello Troops,
The results are in from EdVenture Camp 1.

Lord of the Votes:  Bracken
SubLord of the Votes:  Bradyn L.

Overall:
Voyager: 1.09
Odyssey:  1.13
Phoenix:  1.20
Galileo:  1.28
Magellan:  1.08

Come Back:  1.07
Class Session:  1.50
Bonus:  9.11

Lagoon:  1.29
Movies:  1.00
Mall:  1.07
Water Park:  1.17

Congratulations to the Magellan!  Magellan takes the first camp.  Great Job Zac, Mark, Nicole, Tanner, Jackie, Scott, Tim, James M., Aliah, Mark S., Matt M., Marissa and Dakota. 

The following was written by Aleta Clegg and taken from her Blog.  Aleta is our curriculum writer, Digitarium Director, Office Assistant, Summer Cook etc., etc.,
Oh, I almost forgot - Ultimate Queen of the Galaxy!

She is also a published author.  


I have a new title at work


TARDIS

My day job (www.spacecamputah.org) is interesting, in all sorts of ways. I never quite know what to expect from day to day. The other week, I had a girl give me a new title.

I had a planetarium show scheduled for the evening, a local youth group wanted to learn more about the night sky. One of the girls was an avid Dr. Who fan. She was so excited to be at a place that celebrated science fiction, even if it was a different universe. Until we got to the planetarium.

Our planetarium is a portable system from Digitalis. (They make the Stellarium software package. If you ever wanted to learn constellations or find out what's in the sky when, this is an excellent program. Plus, it's FREE. And no, they didn't pay me to endorse it for them.) The inflatable dome is dark blue, almost an exact color match to Dr. Who's tardis. She had to point it out to me. So I, being a big Dr. Who fan myself, told her it was bigger inside than outside. Not really, but since we have the entire universe inside, it does look bigger inside than out.

Once we were inside and seated, I launched into my spiel about how we can time travel and where they should look to see what time and date we were at. This girl couldn't contain herself. She blurted out, "You're a Time Lord!"

I love it. I'm going to print that on all my business cards. I'm a Time Lord. I can take you anywhere in time and/or space in my tardis. Oh, yeah, work is sweet.

(I'm also Ultimate Queen of the Galaxy. My boss officially gave me the title because titles cost nothing and it doesn't change my job description.)

Aleta Clegg


And Now, From the Imaginarium.....



 Standing Alone for Right.  
This is how change happens.








The Enterprise, your Grandfather's Ship.
You wouldn't find a USS Voyager crew doing this on a Friday Night.








Sunday, June 10, 2012

Weekend Comments, News and... The Imaginarium

Hello Troops,
We've successfully complete our first week of summer camps.  The staff stumbled to their cars yesterday afternoon and disappeared - only to be recalled once again Monday to start the whole thing again.  This week we add an extra camp day.  We have an overnight camp on Monday, then an Ultimate Camp starting on Wednesday and ending Saturday.  Let it never be said grass grows under the feet of a Space Center staff or volunteer.  

We realize work brings reward.  Our reward for these long summer hours is the financial means to operate for another year from our summer camp earnings.  There is also the joy we feel deep inside from running our missions.  It is rewarding to watch a simulator full of campers respond to your work with applause, laughter, and the occasional scream.  It is, at least for me, the best job in the world and I want to thank my staff and volunteers for coming along for the ride and helping me make this all possible.  We have done a truly amazing thing! 

This last week's campers were truly amazing.  Everyone agrees the EdVenture Camp ending Saturday was one of the best ever.  If you were on that camp as a staff, volunteer or camper - WELL DONE!  I'd love to see everyone of those campers back again.  They were kind to each other, respectful to the staff and appreciative of our hard work.  If only all our camps this summer were as good.  I'm keeping my fingers crossed and hoping with every fiber of my being that our temptress Fortuna finds her summer's entertainment in Greece or Spain (as if they need any more bad luck with their economies). 

 

This is Tori.  Tori is being congratulated for receiving her one year pin from none other than yours truly.  Tori is one of our outstanding young volunteers with a great attitude.  The Flight Directors and Supervisors have nothing but good to say about Tori. 



This is Mr. Daymont congratulating young Jordan Smith on the occasion of his receiving his Phoneix Pin.  Jordan is one of those volunteers who never stops talking.  He talks and talks and talks and talks - almost non-stop.

"I can never get a word in edgewise," Mr. Daymont confided to me just last week.  "What do I do?  You've got to help me.  He knows something about everything.  I bring up a subject I'm sure he is ignorant about and OFF HE GOES throwing out facts, figures, prose, poetry and dialog."  

I promised Mr. Daymont I'd figure out a way to contain Jordan's abundant, vocal, and demonstrative enthusiasm.  I could be rich if his energy could be bottled and sold as an elixir for diminished attentiveness.   

(of course, many of you who know Jordan are scratching your heads and saying, "There Mr. Williamson goes again.....). 



Bracken, Jon and a slew of staff and volunteers did a couple test missions of the Voyager's new summer story, Much Ado About Horace.   The fist test mission was told last Saturday to  the Park City iWorlds staff.  That night the part of Dweeb was played by none other than Bradyn Lystrup pictured above.  Horace was played by Bracken's young cousin.   Since then, this new mission has been told three other times and was very well received by our last EdVenture Campers.  


Picture above are four of the Space Center's most awesome and vivacious volunteers enjoying a wee bit of down time on one of Tyler Gardner's new luxury benches found only at the Space Center in Central School's lobby.  I was happy to pay the bench fee as a treat for their hard work.  Left to right..
Caitlynn, Erin, Samantha and Marissa.

I noticed something strange about this quartet. Did you spot it?  I appears they are all color blind.  I'm also wondering if there is a condition called Pattern Blindness?

   

I refer you to the photograph above.  Do you see the reason for my concern?  Is this the kind of volunteer we want at the Space Center?  Volunteers with mother's who will let them leave home with mismatched socks and shoes?  What is the story here?  Are we seeing proof that this new generation of Americans are truly so hopelessly lost and uneducated that they can't even dress themselves properly?  Is this country going to the dogs?

I can only hope my horror at the photo above may be the result of my advanced age.  Could it be that Mr. Williamson isn't "with it" any more.  Could it be that I'm so far gone that I don't know what is fashionable these days?

In my day on the prairies of South Dakota,  girls would never dress in such an UnChristianlike way.  The Lutherans would never tolerate it.  Social ostracism would be the result, for the young ladies and possibly their families.  Of course, that was in my day on a planet far far away from Utah.  Perhaps I need to get with the times and become more accepting of the latest fads.  Hey, if I can tolerate long hair, shorts that look more like skirts and skin tight jeans on boys, than I can learn to accept mismatched socks and shoes on girls.

"Groovy," is what I've got to say about that.

And Now, A Few Things from the Imginarium   


There is a lot to this cartoon.  The subject is math, but I see it could also work for Flight Directing.
The formula to running a Space Center mission flows along, completely understandable, until you reach that point at the beginning of the mission when a miracle happens and the magic begins.
My Flight Directors know just what I'm talking about.  


 This is one high tech and efficient way to stop cheating soon to be implemented at your friendly neighborhood school.  Yes, here in the Imaginarium we find the most creative ways to accomplish our goals and objectives.  Cheap and easy is the name of the game. 



Where are you on the spectrum in regards to your goals?


A lesson learned by many of us.
Funny how many wet pant legs I saw at the Space Center right after that movie.


I end this post with something truly amazing.  Great imagination and creativity - both qualities greatly admired at the Space Center.  Enjoy.......