Teachers Honor Einstein’s Work Aboard NASA’s “Weightless Wonder”
April 27th, 2006 Leave a comment Visited 50 times, 1 so far today
Teachers Honor Einstein’s Work Aboard NASA’s “Weightless Wonder”
NASA ’s C-9 aircraft, the “Weightless Wonder,” early next month. The experiments will celebrate the 100th anniversary of Albert Einstein’s discoveries. NASA, the World Year of Physics, the American Association of Physics Teachers and the American Physical Society selected six proposals from high-school students and teachers nationwide for experiments to be flown on the aircraft. The aircraft will give flyers the feel of space as it conducts a series of flying maneuvers over the Gulf of Mexico, creating multiple periods of reduced gravity.
The teachers will arrive at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston on May 4. The teams are scheduled to fly experiments the week of May 8. The selected teams and experiments are:
- Beaumont High School, Cleveland Heights, Ohio: Free-Standing Liquid Bridges
- Circle High School, Towanda, Kan.: Mathematics of Microgravity
- Columbus High School, Columbus, Ga.: Space Communication and Spacecraft Tumbling
- Glenbrook North High School, Northbrook, Ill.: Electrostatics of Granular Materials and Surface Tension – The Art of Science
- Greendale High School, Greendale, Wis.: Magnificent Magnets
- Roosevelt High School, Seattle: Robot Pointer
“Through their experiments and teachers, students can discover and understand another world – the world of physics. After all, it’s physics that enables the plane to create such a unique learning environment,” said Donn Sickorez, University Affairs Officer of the Reduced Gravity Program at Johnson.
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