MIT Aeronautics and Astronautics Department
enews Vol 3, #7
April 2006
In this issue:
- Awards and recognition
- Job openings
- Green light for Space Logistics Phase II
- AA competes in Design-Build-Fly contest
- Alumnus Richard Hardy endows
new fellowship
- SPHERES arrives at ISS
- Devotion display for Drela
- Seamans' autobio now online
- Student group news
- Cummings comments feature in Air & Space
Mag
- Deshpande invites Ignition, Innovation
Grant proposals
- News RSS now on Aero-Astro web
1. AWARDS AND RECOGNITION
The University of Pretoria presented Aero-Astro head Professor Wesley
L. Harris with an honorary Ph.D. degree on April 26. Harris was cited “for
his contributions as a leader of the civil rights movement and for
his scholarship at the highest level.” In honoring Harris,
the U. Pretoria stated, “Professor Harris endured great social
isolation to excel as a black scholar, but his activism was well-balanced
with his academics. Although his stellar academic record earned him
the envy of most of his white classmates, he motivated and convinced
his fellow black learners that in a hostile environment they could
still achieve academically at the highest level. In this regard,
he is an international and outstanding role model for the youth of
South Africa in general, and to the engineering students of the University
of Pretoria in particular.” Congratulations to Professor Harris.
Professor Larry Young alerts us that earlier this month he “made the podium” by
finishing third in his age group in Giant Slalom at the US Masters Alpine Ski
National Championships. And, he didn't break anything.
2. JOB OPENINGS
The Environmental Design Space is on the hunt for a Research Engineer.
Responsibilities include assessment and application of a suite of
computational aircraft design tools, leading development of a fidelity
management system, close collaboration with graduate students and
other researchers, and interaction with industry partners. Requirements:
Ph.D., along with technical skills in the area of aerospace system
design. Familiarity with the basics of aircraft and engine conceptual
design is desired, along with strong computational skills and the
ability to learn new design tools. Excellent teamwork, oral communication
and written communication skills are essential. Resumes to: amaynard@mit.edu by June 1, 2006
3. GREEN LIGHT FOR SPACE LOGISTICS II
Professor
Oli de Weck writes, “I am happy to
report that NASA has chosen to exercise its option for Phase II of
the Space Logistics Project (http://spacelogistics.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org). Phase
II goes from April 29, 2006 to February 28, 2007 and is valued at
$776k.” Professor
de Weck says there is an additional, currently unfunded, option 2
for terrestrial analog research, specifically, an expedition to the
Arctic where extraterrestrial conditions can be simulated, valued
at $224k if the additional funds can be found. This brings the total
contract value to $2.4 million. MIT PIs for the project are Professor
de Weck and Professor David Simchi-Levi of Civil and Environmental
Engineering. The project is developing an integrated planning, simulation
and optimization capability for future interplanetary exploration
logistics (SpaceNet). There are about 15 students and staff working
on this from AA, CEE and ESD.
4. AA COMPETES IN DESIGN-BUILD-FLY CONTEST
Three Aero-Astro 16.821 student teams successfully
competed in the AIAA/Naval Research Laboratory/Cessna Design-Build-Fly
competition http://www.ae.uiuc.edu/aiaadbf/ in Wichita this month.
Nearly 40 other school teams from around the U.S., Canada, Turkey,
and Israel were represented, and our teams took 11th, 21st, and 25th
places. Our 11th place team's plane crashed on its first flight attempt –in
a heroic effort, the team rebuilt the entire fuselage overnight and rejoin
the competition on Sunday. The students represented the department well, particularly
considering that this was MIT's first attempt in the competition in several
years. Thanks to Col. John Keesee for filing this report. Col. Keesee, along
with Col. Pete Young, Professors Earll Murman and Dave Miller, and Paul Bauer,
were there to support the students.
5. ALUMNUS
RICHARD HARDY ENDOWS NEW FELLOWSHIP
Through the substantial generosity of Aero-Astro alumnus Richard
Hardy (1958) and his wife, Linda, the department has established
the Linda and Richard Hardy Fellowship. This endowment will support,
in perpetuity, our most talented graduate students. Department head
Professor Wes Harris says that these resources greatly strengthen
the department, and help us achieve our mission to educate the future
aerospace workforce and to undertake the research to support industry
competitiveness. Initially, the expendable resources for the first
three years will be allocated to a faculty member and a student who
are interested in lightweight structures for aircraft and launch
vehicles. Following this period, the fellowship will be awarded in
conjunction with our other department fellowships, to outstanding
incoming or continuing students.
6. SPHERES ARRIVES
AT ISS
After launch aboard Progress 21P on Monday April 24th, 2006,
the first Aero-Astro Space Systems Lab, http://ssl.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/,
SPHERES satellite has reached the International Space Station. Docking
occurred on April 26, the crew unpacked the hardware the following
day. As we go to press, the SPHERES team is finalizing the software
to be delivered to NASA April 28, for use during the first test session,
scheduled for Fri May 19. The team will be busy for many weeks, reports
SPHERES team member Dr. Alvar Saenz-Otero as they prepare for a second
test session on Fri May 26th and beyond. Read more at http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/newsoffice/2006/mini-satellites.html
7. DEVOTION DISPLAY FOR DRELA
An Aero-Astro enews source reports that on April 7, Unified
students put on a spontaneous display of their fondness for Professor
Mark Drela - on the day of fluids quiz, no less. The students arrived
wearing T-shirts emblazoned with an alpha on the front (angle of
attack), and, on the back, a drawing of Professor Drela tearing his
shirt open to reveal an alpha symbol atop the word "Airdrela." A
revealing photo is posted at http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/aeroastro/img/flyingdrela.jpg
8. SEAMANS AUTOBIO NOW ONLINE
Professor emeritus Robert Seamans' autobiography, Aiming
at Targets, can now be read online at http://history.nasa.gov/SP-4106/sp4106.htm.
Dr. Seamans, a former Aero-Astro Department Head and MIT Dean of
Engineering, was associate and deputy NASA administrator during
much of the 1960s. He has been Secretary of the Air Force, the
first administrator of the Energy Research and Development Administration,
and president of the National Academy of Engineering. Aiming
at Targets is a wonderfully readable account of his life and work,
full of telling anecdotes, and includes a substantial section on
his time at NASA. Dr. Seamans also expanded upon his time at NASA
in his more recent monograph Project Apollo:
The Tough Decisions,
available for download at http://history.nasa.gov/monograph37.pdf
9. STUDENT GROUP NEWS
The MIT Mars Society http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/mars/ is holding its annual
Boy Scouts Space Exploration Merit Badge Workshop on Saturday,
April 29. Shannon Dong, of the society, says, “We’re expecting around 70 scouts for this event.
Among the activities include a guest lecture by (former astronaut) Prof. Jeff
Hoffman; rocket launching on the fields; classes on history of unmanned space
exploration, history of human space flight, and physics of rocketry; and design
exercises for a Mars base and an unmanned mission.” Any questions, comments,
or eager volunteers, are welcome to email ms-officers@mit.edu.
Elizabeth Jordan invites all AA graduate students, staff, and faculty
to GA^3’s
(Graduate Association of Aeronautics and Astronautics) 3rd annual Wine & Cheese
Social on Thursday May 4th, from 5-7 p.m. in the Mezzanine Lounge of the Student
Center. She also notes that the final GA^3 lab seminar of the semester, hosted
by TeLAMS, will be May 9 at 4 p.m. And, there will be a social hour with GAME
(Graduate Association of Mechanical Engineers) May 18th from 6-8 p.m. at the
Thirsty Ear. For more information about GA^3 and upcoming events visit http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/ga3/www/
10. CUMMINGS COMMENTS FEATURE IN AIR & SPACE MAG
Professor Missy Cummings and her Humans and Automation
Lab are prominently featured in the April/May issue of Smithsonian
Air & Space magazine. In the article “Son
of Apollo,” which discusses the next generation of lunar lander, Professor
Cummings discusses the glass cockpit she envisions for the new craft. The article
reads, in part, “'If the system is designed right,' says Cummings, ‘anybody,
anywhere, anytime should be able to control the lunar lander. The operator wouldn't
even have to be on board. You do not need 1,000 carrier landings or the Right
Stuff to be a good lunar lander pilot.’” Read the entire article
at http://www.airandspacemagazine.com/ASM/Mag/Index/2006/AM/soap.html
11. DESHPANDE INVITES IGNITION, INNOVATION GRANT PROPOSALS
The Deshpande Center has asked Aero-Astro enews to spread the word
that the May 8 deadline is approaching for its Ignition and Innovation
grants pre -proposals. Ignition Grant funding — up to $50,000 per grant — “targets
projects focusing on novel, enabling, and potentially useful ideas in all
areas of technology.” Though it might enable only exploratory experiments
and proof of concept, an Ignition Grant might position projects to receive
further funding, such as an Innovation Grant, to take a concept to full development.
Innovation Grants — for as much as $250,000 —“keep the
innovation process on track and moving forward.” They're meant to benefit
projects that have progressed beyond their earliest stages — projects
that have established proof of concept and identified an R&D path and
IP strategy. Ultimately, each grant will help a project build a package to
bring to venture capitalists or companies that might invest in its technology.
More info at http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/deshpandecenter/grants.html
12. NEWS RSS NOW ON AERO-ASTRO WEB
With the addition of an RSS feed from the News Office to the department
Web site, Aero-Astro articles from the MIT News Office Aero-Astro
site now automatically appear on our Department Web site news page http://web.mit.edu.ezproxyberklee.flo.org/aeroastro/news/index.html.
RSS (which stands for Really Simple Syndication or Rich Site Summary – take
your pick) is group of XML based Web-content distribution and republication
(syndication) formats primarily used by news sites and blogs. It allows
for automated publication of summaries and information. Thanks to Phyllis
Collymore for her assistance in setting this up.
CONTRIBUTE TO THE E-NEWS
Please share your news with the rest of the Aero-Astro community by contributing to the e-news. Awards, events, new research - it's all of interest. Send your suggestions to wlitant@mit.edu.