Students operate $214M NASA spacecraft: āItās like what you see in the moviesā
Over the next two years, Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲBoulder undergraduates working as flight controllers at the will help manage the day-to-day mission operations of NASAās spacecraft. From Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲBoulderās East Campus, theyāll send commands, tell the $214 million satellite where to point, and monitor its health and safety.
Each year LASP recruits about 10 students, who spend the summer learning about spacecraft operationsāfrom how engineers keep components warm in space to how satellites turn using thrusters and spinning motors. In all, 23 students work in operations at the institute. Mary Wells, a senior studying physics and an IXPE command controller, has certainly caught the space bug. āItās like what you see in movies,ā Wells said. āThereās a real feeling of being involved in something bigger.ā
Principals
Ā鶹Ćā·Ń°ęĻĀŌŲBoulder undergraduate students; LASP Mission Operations Center Funding National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Funding
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Collaboration + support
Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP); Ball Aerospace; NASAās Marshall Space Flight Center; Italian Space Agency An artistās rendition of NASAās Imaging X-Ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) mission, which LASP students and staff are operating. Illustration: NASA
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Students operate $214M spacecraft. āItās like what you see in the movies.ā