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Michael Mewhinney
NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
Phone: 650-604-3937/9000
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November 16, 2006
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RELEASE: 06-83AR
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NASA Announces New Systems Engineering Award Competition
NASA today announced an opportunity for university students to work with
NASA engineers to conceive, design, fabricate and test a
radio-controlled aircraft capable of taking off and landing while
carrying a maximum load of cargo.
Students will develop their aircraft and compete for the new NASA
Systems Engineering Award as part of the Aero Design competition, made
possible through a partnership between NASA's Aeronautics Research
Mission Directorate and SAE International. Students competing for the
award will receive e-mail feedback from NASA engineers who will review
the students' work at two critical points during the design and
development of their aircraft.
"The purpose of this new award is to engage students in the systems
engineering process," explained Deborah Bazar, a project manager in the
Education Division at NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.
"NASA wants to expose more of today's engineering students to systems
engineering concepts and practice, which is integral to industry and
research in today's world," she added.
Each year, hundreds of engineering students compete for cash awards
during SAE International's two North American Aero Design competitions -
one on the East Coast and one on the West Coast. The next Aero Design
East will be held May 4-6, 2007 in Fort Worth, Texas. The next Aero
Design West will be held March 23-25, 2007 in San Fernando, Calif.
Systems engineering is a logical set of grouped processes performed by
multidisciplinary teams to engineer and integrate systems to ensure
products meet customer needs. A systems engineering plan implements a
core set of common technical processes and requirements needed to
define, develop and integrate products created for an organization.
Systems engineering processes build upon and apply best practices and
lessons learned from NASA, as well as other government agencies,
academia, trade associations and industry, to clearly delineate a
successful model to complete comprehensive technical work, reduce
program and technical risk and improve mission success.
With this competition, NASA continues its tradition of investing in the
nation's education programs. The competition directly ties into the
agency's major education goal of strengthening NASA and the nation's
future workforce. Through this and the agency's other college and
university programs, NASA will identify and develop the critical skills
and capabilities needed to support its long-term aeronautics
requirements.
SAE International has more than 90,000 members who share information and
exchange ideas for advancing the engineering of mobility systems used in
designing, building, maintaining, and operating self-propelled vehicles
for use on land or sea, in air or space.
For more information about the new NASA Systems Engineering Award, visit:
http://students.sae.org/competitions/aerodesign/nasaaward.htm
For more information about SAE International's education programs, visit:
http://students.sae.org/
For information about NASA education programs, visit:
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/aero/education.htm
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