AIAA Has a Blast in Huntsville

Northeastern’s premier Aerospace Club recently participated in NASA’s Student Launch Initiative. This invitation-only event was held in Rocket City, Huntsville, AL. The club was able to tour Marshall Space Flight Center, dine under a Saturn V, and compete in a robotics and rocket competition against twenty-five universities from across the country. For this project, they designed and built an autonomous robot capable of landing on Mars, capturing a payload, and returning it to Earth via rocket.


(NU Team interviewed around the 15:00 minute mark.)


Source: News @ Northeastern

The North­eastern Uni­ver­sity chapter of the Amer­ican Insti­tute of Aero­nau­tics and Astro­nau­tics recently under­took its toughest mis­sion to date, and through it learned the power of teamwork.

In April, the stu­dent group com­peted in NASA’s Stu­dent Launch Ini­tia­tive, an annual research-​​​​based, com­pet­i­tive, and expe­ri­en­tial explo­ration project that pro­vides rel­e­vant and cost-​​​​effective research and devel­op­ment to sup­port the Space Launch System.

It was overall a fan­tastic expe­ri­ence,” said the club’s past pres­i­dent Andrew Buggee, S’16. “Everyone just came back with this amazing confidence.”

This year each of the 23 par­tic­i­pating schools was tasked with designing and building a rocket with a robotic com­po­nent that would grab a pay­load and load it into the rocket. The rocket then had to pre­pare itself for lift off, launch into the air, and then jet­tison the pay­load at a spe­cific alti­tude. The stu­dents were told their work could pos­sibly inspire how NASA approaches future Mars missions.

It was really inspiring to be able to see that we are doing this work and it could lead to some­thing that might end up in space,” said club member Alanna Ferri, E’16.

The 13 stu­dents drove two straight days down to the Mar­shall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, where they pre­sented their rocket to NASA engi­neers and received a tour of the flight center.

Unfor­tu­nately, due to mechan­ical prob­lems that arose the day of the com­pe­ti­tion, the North­eastern group’s rocket was not fully func­tional. How­ever, the group still received high praise from the judges for the autonomous ground sup­port sta­tion, which con­sisted of the robotic arm, the vision system to look for the pay­load, and the rocket.

They also praised the fact the sta­tion was the only one among all the entrants that remained com­pact and unfurled–unveiling the rocket and preparing it for liftoff–only when it was ready to land much like an actual NASA apparatus.

NASA wanted us to keep the Mars envi­ron­ment in our heads when we were designing and we took those instruc­tions very seri­ously,” Buggee said. “They said ours was more fit for an actual mission.”

In addi­tion to building the rocket, the ini­tia­tive required stu­dents to keep detailed records of their work and pro­vide reg­ular updates to NASA via video con­fer­ence. They also appointed club board member Joe Fla­herty, E’18, to focus on devel­oping pro­grams in sci­ence, tech­nology, engi­neering, and math—known as the STEM fields—to engage more than 200 young stu­dents, another cri­teria of the initiative.

Having to incor­po­rate a facet of spe­cial­ties including elec­tronics, robotics, and rock­etry into one con­trap­tion was no small task, and Buggee said most of the club mem­bers did not take a weekend off during the spring semester.

Seeing the ded­i­ca­tion people put into it was inspiring,” Buggee said. “The word ‘NASA’ holds a lot of gravity. To see freshmen spending every Friday and Sat­urday night sol­dering cir­cuit boards makes you want to keep going.”