51勛圖窪蹋

First Nations Rocket Team Prepares for Launch

News
First Nations Rocket Team preparing to launch in the Mojave Desert April 17
Andrea Lopez Arguello, rocketry advisor William Walby, Anthony Pham, Tyler Mayxonesing and Willie Feng-Liu prepare to launch their rocket at a site in the Mojave Desert April 17. The launch was part of the NASA-sponsored First Nations Launch competition.

Students from the First Nations Launch team at the University of California, Davis, will launch a rocket this Saturday (May 15) on behalf of a team from Queens University in Kingston, Ontario. The Canadian team is unable to carry out its own launch due to pandemic restrictions.

The rocket launch is part of the First Nations Launch competition sponsored by NASA and the Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium at Carthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin. The 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis team already carried out its own launch at a site in the Mojave Desert April 17.

The May 15 launch will take place at the Maddox Dairy facility near Fresno, California. Due to safety precautions, entry to the launch site is restricted to team members.

Under competition rules, the Queens University team will carry out the launch via Zoom, giving instructions to the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis team on site.

We cant turn the switches without their instructions, said 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis team lead Andrea Lopez Arg羹ello, an undergraduate majoring in physics with an emphasis in astrophysics.

Other student members of the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis team are: Tyler Mayxonesing, majoring in computer engineering; Willie Feng-Liu, electrical and computer engineering; Anthony Pham, electrical engineering; and Pratham Goradia, aerospace engineering. The team is organized through the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis chapter of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society, or AISES. Advisors for the First Nations Launch team are James Letts, assistant professor, Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology; and Maria Maldonado, postdoctoral researcher molecular and cellular biology.

Mentoring the team on rocketry are Becky Green and William Walby, who both have level 3 certification from the National Association of Rocketry. Colton Baumler, a 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis graduate student in biochemistry, molecular, cellular and developmental biology with experience in mechanical engineering, also advised the team.

Developing design skills through rocketry

The Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium First Nations Launch competition offers students attending Tribal Colleges and Universities, Native American Non-Tribal Institutions as well as active AISES college chapters the opportunity to demonstrate engineering and design skills through high-power rocketry. The competition requires teams of undergraduate students to conceive, design, fabricate and compete with high-power rockets. The rockets must meet a series of challenges, including reaching a height of 3,500 to 4,000 feet, having a hatch door that opens at maximum height, and deploying two parachutes, which slow the rockets descent and bring it back to earth intact.

Most competition points are awarded for design, with a series of detailed monthly reports. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, teams were unable to complete a test launch prior to the main competition launch. 

Andrea Lopez Arguello with rocket at Mojave April 17
Lopez Arg羹ello makes last minute adjustments to the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis rocket before launch April 17.

On its first venture into the competition, the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis team collected a series of awards including second place for written reports and oral presentation, and first place for outreach to tribal-affiliated schools. The team was awarded a grant of $15,000 to compete in the NASA Student Launch Initiative competition in Georgia next spring.

Im really, really proud of how well the team did, Letts said.

Lopez Arg羹ello discovered the competition through a national AISES conference and convinced Letts to sign on.

We are a small chapter, and these opportunities do not come along often, Lopez Arg羹ello said. As someone who is Indigenous and undocumented, I want to take any opportunity I can.

While a student at community college, Lopez Arg羹ello spent a week at NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center working on science curriculum development for students from kindergarten to third grade. Beyond that, she had no previous experience with NASA or rocketry.

It was a really big learning curve for me and for the team, she said. Due to pandemic restrictions, while the entire team worked on rocket design and report-writing, Lopez Arg羹ello did most of the actual construction herself with help from Green and Walby.

Im very impressed with how Andrea has taken this on and got it done, Letts said.

Through the competition, the students and advisors have earned level 1 certification from the National Association of Rocketry. Lopez Arg羹ello is working toward her level 2 certification, allowing the team to work with larger and more powerful rockets.

Media Resources

Media Contact:

  • Andy Fell, News and Media Relations, 530-304-8888, ahfell@ucdavis.edu

More Information:

 

 

Primary Category

Secondary Categories

Student Life

Tags