Student group blasts off

The new American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) club won first place in the Target Altitude Event at their very first competition at "Battle of the Rockets" in Culpeper, VA.


Source: News @ Northeastern

After a four-​​hour drive to Cobleskill, N.Y., five mem­bers of Northeastern’s chapter of the Amer­ican Insti­tute of Aero­nau­tics and Astro­nau­tics climbed out of their van and into the frigid early-​​winter air. Then they pro­ceeded to fill a giant, seven-​​foot weather bal­loon with helium.

In a box cooler affixed to the bal­loon with twist-​​ties and cara­bi­neers, the team mem­bers placed an old iPhone, a Go-​​Pro camera, and some cave cal­cite and kun­zite min­erals, which are known to flu­o­resce under short-​​wave ultra­vi­olet light—but are only acces­sible above the ozone layer. Then they let go of the bal­loon and watched it drift off into the upper atmos­phere, some­where on the order of 90,000 feet above the earth and close to the ozone layer.

An hour and a half later, the bal­loon and its inan­i­mate pas­sen­gers landed safely in Bed­ford, N.H., where another seven mem­bers of the group were able to find it by tracking the iPhone’s GPS signal.

While the exper­i­ment with the min­erals didn’t go as planned, the group’s founding pres­i­dent Andrew Buggee, S’16, says the event was nothing short of a suc­cess. It was the group’s first big project and it was, by all accounts, thrilling.

Buggee, who’s majoring in physics and minoring in mechan­ical engi­neering, has always been inter­ested in aero­space sci­ence. But since no campus club existed, he took the ini­tia­tive to start one. He and his room­mate, Tom Kerikas, E’16, began plan­ning the AIAA group in the spring of 2013, Buggee says, “but it really took off after the COE Freshman Night this fall.”

Though they had no fancy ban­ners or gad­gets to impress the first-​​year stu­dents looking for exciting extracur­ric­ular activities—in fact they had nothing with them but a dusty copy of an intro to rocket sci­ence textbook—Buggee and Kerikas met with a huge amount of interest from the stu­dents. Sev­eral dozen showed up to the group’s first meeting a couple weeks later.

One of those stu­dents, Mary Mor­rison, is now the group’s trea­surer and per­haps its biggest advo­cate. “A lot of people are pretty suc­cessful at finding their own aero­space co-​​ops,” she says. “But it would be nice to see more of a com­mu­nity aca­d­e­m­i­cally, with sup­port from teachers, fac­ulty, and clubs at North­eastern.” And that’s pre­cisely what the AIAA group has created.

In early April, the team held its biggest event yet. This time, instead of launching a bal­loon into the upper atmos­phere, the group mem­bers were tasked with building a rocket to com­pete in the annual AIAA Battle of the Rockets in Culpeper, Va. Despite a few set­backs, the team came in first place in the event, launching its rocket—lovingly named Cal Ripken in honor of the cal­i­bra­tion mea­sure­ment that deter­mines a rocket’s stability—closer to the desired height of 1,500 feet than any other team.

Next up on the group’s agenda? Repeat the bal­loon mis­sion, get cer­ti­fied to launch rockets at higher power, and secure funding for a host of research projects, including sending a cube satel­lite into space with the help of astro­nauts at the Inter­na­tional Space Station.

Those are the big ideas. They’ve also got some smaller ones per­co­lating just for fun, such as flying a gold­fish across campus. No word yet on the fea­si­bility of that adventure.