Article Entry

02 Sep 2010

Comments:2

College Students Crash NASA Satellite Into Arctic

Added by USGIF Category: Daily Intelligence Brief


Many of us got to experience some pretty fun things while in college. From travels abroad to sports and let’s be honest, some good old-fashioned college partying. But, we have yet to run across any college students who get the rare privilege of crashing a NASA satellite. University of Colorado at Boulder undergraduates were lucky to have the opportunity to crash (come on now – how cool is that?) the Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite, or ICESat, in the Arctic. The satellite had been in orbit for seven years – and C.U. Boulder students have been controlling the satellite for that time period. Why did they crash the satellite? The satellite had outlasted its targeted design life, before its primary sensor – a laser device intended for measuring ice thickness, forest cover – failed last year. So, yes, while college can often include learning how to do keg stands, it can also present an incredible opportunity like this for students. Go C.U. Boulder.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

2 Comments »

  1. Bret Durrett wrote: 3 September 2010

    Were they able to get any useful science out of it either on the way down or from the impact site?

    We took science data from SMART-1 all the way to impact on the moon after it ran out of fuel

  2. CU Boulder wrote: 3 September 2010

    We don’t just crash satellites, we build them too! =)

    CU Boulder by the way… not UC… kinda like KU, DU, you know…

Share Your Thoughts