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

Saturday, June 22, 2013

A New Star System Discovered in Our Back Yard. New Farpoint Cadets. Former Flight Director Wins NASA Award. Snow Cone Nirvana . The Imaginarium.

Meet Our Farpoint Cadets

Our Farpoint Cadets will play a vital role in the building and operations of SpaceGuard's Farpoint Station at Kepler 62e due to open in the fall of 2014.  Over sixty outstanding young men and women have joined the program, with more applications waiting for review.

Until Farpoint Station opens, the Farpoint Cadets carry out their training at the Discovery Center and the Christa McAluiffe Center - both in Pleasant Grove, Utah.  The cadets learn technical, leadership and communication skills by working in the control rooms of the various starship simulators.  Problem solving and acting skills are emphasised in the simulators where the cadets work as assistant staff and actors.

Do you think you have what it takes to become a SpaceGuard Cadet?  Visit Farpointstation.org today and fill out an application.  Go Boldly on a learning adventure unlike any other.




Bradyn is pictured above sitting in the Phoenix's 2nd chair station for the CMSEC's Super Saturday.
Bradyn will be attending American Fork Junior High next year.  Bradyn plans on joining Farpoint's Computer Programming Department and helping with the writing of Farpoint's computer controls.


Dakota goes to American Fork Junior High.  He has his finger on the Phoenix Flight Director's keyboard.  
"What will happen if I push this button?" he's thinking.  A good cadet never pushes buttons in the simulators unless asked.  Pushing control room buttons without permission is a bad thing.  Dakota knows this.  You're wondering if he pushed the button.  You'll know if you ever see Dakota again.  




This is Michael.  Michael is an outstanding cadet seen above helping the Magellan Admiral learn his job for Saturday's CMSEC Super Saturday.  Notice how all the other cadets are enjoying the comforts of the simulator's control rooms while Michael is out working with the crew.  Michael sure knows how to impress the boss.

"There can only be one top cadet," Michael was overheard saying to one of the Magellan's staff.  "Those other chumps haven't got a chance."  :)  



This is Victor, also in the Phoenix Control Room's 2nd chair station.  Victor was a long time Space Center volunteer and now a Farpoint Cadet.  He's got a lot of experience both outside and inside the simulators.  He knows how to keep cool in a crisis. Why do you think he chose to work in the Phoenix? He knew the Magellan's air conditioner was on the fritz and, using his seniority, asked Megan if he could work in the Phoenix.

"Who's the Chump now?" Victor chuckled from the cushioned 2nd chair in the luxurious 72 degree control room.



This is Lindsey, one of our outstanding young women cadets.  Lindsey was also assigned to work the Phoenix for the Super Saturday.

"Being the early bird is one of the most important components to success," Lindsey explained when I asked her to sit down for this photo.  "I don't like to sit.  I prefer to stand.  If I'm standing, I can be the first to help someone, or do something the flight director needs done.  First in, last out - that's what its all about."

She reluctantly sat for the photo, but jumped right up after the picture was taken.

Victor is OK with Lindsey's preference for standing.  "I don't have to share this seat with her, and this is the most comfortable chair at the Space Center," he said as he leaned back to enjoy the view of buttons, keyboards, lights and switches.


Daxon and Ethan are good friends and exemplary cadets from Orem, Ut.  They don't have comfortable chairs for the Super Saturday.  

"Stools?  You have to sit on stools for five hours?" I asked.  "Where are the chairs?"

"This control room is too small for chairs," Daxon explained.  He was right.  The Galileo Control room is small, squeezed into the corner of the school's cafeteria.  "Stools are OK.  I'm not complaining."

Ethan chimed in, "The Galileo is my favorite ship so I'm OK with the stools too."

Our Three Newest Cadets


Nick is one of our three newest cadets.  He is seen here at the CMSEC's Magellan 2nd chair station.  Nick goes to Timberline Junior High.


Katie is one of two new cadets added to the cadet corps Saturday afternoon.  Katie finished her last observation and is ready to begin volunteering at both Space Centers.  Welcome to the Farpoint Cadet's Katie!


Jace also finished his last observation today at the Discovery Space Center.  Jace has been a long time fan of the Space Center and has attended many camps.  Jace is seen sitting at the controls of the Atlantis simulator at the Discovery Space Center.

Welcome Nick, Katie and Jace to the Farpoint Cadet Squadron

Quirky's Opens at the Discovery Space Center 

I stopped by the Discovery Space Center yesterday and was greeted by this new roadside sign. 
Quirky's is the newest Quirky thing added to the venues at Stone Gate Center for the Arts and the Discovery Space Center in Pleasant Grove.
  



How cool is it for a Space Center to have its own concession stand?  The campers and guests can satisfy their cravings anytime with a quick walk across the parking lot to Pleasant Grove's newest Sweets and Treats Palace. 

Are you looking for a cool and refreshing snow cone, soda or treat?  Do you have a buck or two burning a hole in your pocket?  Hop on your bike or get mom to take you to Quirky's .  You get a fantastic carbohydrate boost AND you get to help the good folks at the Discovery Space Center earn money to make the center bigger and better.  

Cadets, be sure to bring a little money next time you come to volunteer and treat yourself to a snow cone.  You'll be glad you did.  I sure was.  I ordered a Tiger's Blood.  The ice was chilled to perfection and perfectly shaved to slip effortlessly up the straw and into you mouth. The staff were not stingy on the juice either, something all of us who enjoy snow cones can appreciate.  The snow cones are served in a styrofoam cup.  You won't find those cheap flimsy paper cones at Quirky's.  

Troops, I'm going out on a limb and giving Quirky's five stars based solely on my delicious Tiger's Blood Snow Cone.  Give Quirky's a try.      

The Bott Family, Proud Owners and Proprietors Quirky's, Pleasant Grove's  Newest Sweet and Treat Palace.



Quirky's staff are standing by ready to serve YOU.
At Quirky's you can expect Service with a Smile.


Former Space Center Odyssey Flight Director Receives NASA's Space Technology Research Fellowship.  Congratulations Thomas! 

Four Utah graduate students have a chance to make their marks on space exploration as part of the latest class of NASA’s Space Technology Research Fellowship.
The program selected 65 students whose research shows potential for use in NASA missions."The program is about engaging academia," said program executive Claudia Meyer. "Universities have long been held up as centers of innovation in our country. The program aims to tap into that."The program has already awarded 128 grants since 2011, including to four Utah students."I’ve been working toward an award like this, trying to get into a prestigious fellowship, for 3½ years," said Thomas Hardin, a Brigham Young University student chosen to receive a grant. "It was a big goal achieved."Hardin is researching how the properties of metal change when the material is bent to make products like spoons and cars. His findings would help NASA predict how durable their machines will be in space.Hardin’s interest in space predates his grad school years. In high school, he worked with the flight simulation machine at the Christa McAuliffe Space Education Center in Pleasant Grove."I honestly think that’s why NASA wanted me [for the fellowship], because of my space background," Hardin said. "My research isn’t all that space-oriented."Hardin is joined by BYU’s Ezekiel Merriam, University of Utah student Joe Brink and Utah State University’s Daniel Merkley.Grant recipients are matched with a NASA researcher who will help them with their projects. Students then conduct their research on campus and in U.S. non-profit and NASA labs.Students can be awarded up to $68,000 per year for up to four years. The money covers all the research costs such as the student’s salary and tuition.Grant money also covers perks like health insurance for the student and 10-week summer internships with NASA engineers at professional labs. The internships help students make sure they are developing technologies NASA can use.The grants provide funding specifically for students’ research, giving them the freedom to pursue their own ideas.

It's Summer.  June 21st. The Longest Day of the Year

 This full-disk image from NOAA's GOES-13 satellite was captured at 11:45 UTC (7:45 a.m. EDT) and shows the Americas on June 21, 2012," officials with NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., explained in an image description. "This date marks the start of astronomical summer in the Northern Hemisphere, making it the longest day of the year!"







An Artist Conception of the new WISE Star System.  Our Sun is in the background

Scientists have discovered the closest star system to the sun found in nearly a century.

With a dim duo of "failed stars" known as brown dwarfs at its center, the new neighbor is the third-nearest to our solar system overall, and it could be a good place to look for exoplanets, researchers say.

NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) has discovered a pair of stars that has taken over the title for the third-closest star system to the sun. The duo is the closest star system discovered since 1916.  Both stars in the new binary system are "brown dwarfs," which are stars that are too small in mass to ever become hot enough to ignite hydrogen fusion. As a result, they are very cool and dim, resembling a giant planet like Jupiter more than a bright star like the sun.  Read More



The distance to this brown dwarf pair is 6.5 light-years — so close that Earth's television transmissions from 2006 are now arriving there," Kevin Luhman, a researcher at Penn State's Center for Exoplanets and Habitable Worlds, said in a statement. "It will be an excellent hunting ground for planets because it is very close to Earth, which makes it a lot easier to see any planets orbiting either of the brown dwarfs." [The Strangest Alien Planets]


The Imaginarium
Making the ordinary, extraordinary.

Give a Smile, Get a Smile.  The human way to brighten any day. 











My Parent's Bible When I Was Growing Up :)


A great addition to the bathroom light





Quality, Safety, Service ???

The view outside a hospital window


My OCD is kicking in

The Star in Pixar's new movie: Chairs

You have my attention





Hmmm, there's one doctor I won't be visiting at this clinic

Friday, June 21, 2013

Over the Hill, and I've Got the Lanyard to Prove It. Space News. The Imaginarium.


My very own Space Camp lanyard is the newest addition to my collection of Space Center odds and ends.  

Last week I went to the Space Center to write a Troubadour post on the first summer camp of the 2013 season. Megan Warner had just signed in her last camper.  She stood in front of the assembled group composing her thoughts before opening the camp with her version of my 23 year old Welcome to Camp speech.  I watched from behind the red curtain.  I knew seeing me might cause Megan to break out with a serious case of nervous stuttering - the very purpose for my visit (that, and to highlight our Farpoint Cadets working the camp).  I stepped through the stage curtain and sat down next to a small group of boys. The campers turned and looked at me strangely. They were young and new to the Space Center.  To them, I was just a weird old man who looked like he was going to join them for the camp.

"Who's he?" one girl asked her friend.  They sat on the next riser down to my far right.
"He's not part of the workers.  He's not wearing one of their shirts," her friend answered while addressing my presence with an evil, protective eye.  

Megan smiled.  Refusing to let my sudden appearance throw her off her game, she went back to the sign in table, filled out a name tag, attached it to a lanyard, walked up the risers and gave it to me.  The look on the other camper's faces went from questioning to worry.



"Troops,  this is Mr. Williamson.  He started the Space Center a long time ago.  Everybody say Hello Mr. Williamson."  Megan's introduction replaced worry with smiles.  

"Hello Mr. Williamson," the group welcomed me enthusiastically.  Both Megan and Aleta smiled.  It wasn't a welcome, long time no see, smile.  It was more of a "we got ya" smile. Had I been sabotaged?  I looked down at my lanyard.  Megan had answered my sudden appearance with a well played shot of her own.  

Rank:  Infinite.
Points: Infinite.
Age:  Over the Hill.  

Good Job Megan.  Again, a perfect addition to my collection of Space Center memorabilia.  

Thank you
Mr. W.  

50 Years Ago: Tiros System keeps advancing




Duplicate of Tiros satellite used in public exhibitions across America.

It's worth remembering, so close to the beginning of the hurricane season, that we've only had weather satellites in orbit of Earth for a little over 50 years. On June 19, 1963, NASA launched TIROS 7, a 42 inch diameter, 270 pound marvel of 1960's technology. Liftoff was on a Thor-Able rocket from Launch Complex 17 at Cape Canaveral, Florida.



Thor-Able rocket. Forerunner of the Delta family of rockets.

Tiros 7 continued the use of two camera systems to record cloud cover and track storms, but also borrowed from an Explorer 17 satellite to include new measurements on temperatures in space and infrared reflections of solar and terrestrial radiation. It would last the longest of the many Tiros satellites, until June of 1968. On its first orbit, its camera 2 detected a cloud vortex over Newfoundland and within an hour had pictures transmitted to ground engineers for analysis.

By Mark Daymont
Farpoint Station Educator

The Imaginarium
Making the ordinary, extraordinary every day.  
      


What's happening on level 6?




Not exactly how I would describe the movie, but it works.








Creativity: A




The French Preparing for War












Taking Notes

Yep, summer school








Ready for museum display



An imagination alive and well.
We need more of this in everybody




Random things can make your day