MURFREESBORO — The
14-member MTSU moon buggy team wanted to capture first place in the recent NASA
Human Exploration Rover Challenge, previously known as the Great Moonbuggy
Race, held recently in Huntsville, Ala.
What they brought home — the Neil Armstrong Best Design
Award bestowed by judges on the MTSU Team 2 entry nicknamed “The Beast” — may
have made a more profound impact on the team at the event.
The event
challenges high school, college and university students to design, construct,
test and race lightweight, human-powered rovers capable of performing in the
demanding environments to be explored by future voyagers.
University President Sidney A. McPhee sent his
congratulations to the entire team, saying, “I am proud of this remarkable
accomplishment.”
Team captain Ryan Miller, a senior electro-mechanical
engineering major from Chattanooga, Tenn., led the design effort, which began
in the summer of 2013.
“I’m very pleased we got the best design award,” Miller
said. “Only one team (in the university division) receives the design award.
That made me very happy.”
The award, which was presented during the awards’ ceremony,
is “for outstanding achievement in the design of a human powered exploration
rover and contributions toward the next steps in human exploration of the solar
system.”
It is named in honor of the late Armstrong, an American
astronaut and first person to walk on the moon in 1969 during the Apollo 11
space voyage.
Professor Saeed Foroudastan, who oversees the MTSU
Experimental Vehicles Program and serves as a mentor, said it was a well-deserved
honor for such a dedicated, hard-working team.
After a third-place showing in the 2013 race, two MTSU teams
placed fifth and 12th overall this year.
MTSU Team 2 finished with an overall best time of 5 minutes,
6 seconds in the two-day rover challenge competition. The University of Puerto
Rico Humacao Team 2 finished first in 4:09.
MTSU Team 1, with the modified 2013 entry nicknamed “The
Model T,” fashioned a time of 10:25, which included penalties.
“I’m proud of the team,” Miller said. “We had a lot more
team spirit and camaraderie.”
Forty-six teams competed in the college and university
division.
The competition
is designed to teach students to solve practical design and engineering
problems and demonstrates NASA's continuing commitment to inspire new
generations of scientists, engineers, technicians and astronauts.
In addition to
Miller, team members include co-captain Dustin Taylor of Murfreesboro and
formerly from Baton Rouge, La.; Team 2 drivers Devin Raines of Murfreesboro and
Josh Calvin of Nashville; Team 1 drivers Jasmine Johnson of Humboldt, Tenn.,
and Zack Hill of Hendersonville, Tenn.; senior Thomas Cox of Nashville; juniors
Beau Hallavant of Bell Buckle, Tenn., Steven Chaput of Manchester, Tenn., Les
McGuffey of Nashville and Thomas McKinney of Franklin, Tenn.; freshman Alec
Urban of Murfreesboro and formerly from Richmond, Va.; and graduate students
Jeremy Posey of Adairville, Ky., and Dianna Prince of Estill Springs, Tenn.
No comments:
Post a Comment