NASA Space Settlement Contest

Space Settlement logo man reaching for the stars NASA Space Settlement Contest.

Contest prizes and certificates:

  • All participants will receive a certificate. All submissions must be received by March 31, 2009.
  • The best submission wins the grand prize, consisting of the space colony submission being placed on the NASA Ames World Wide Web site.
  • All contest participants are invited to attend the NSS 28th annual International Space Development Conference in Orlando, Florida, May 7-10, 2009. Special activities for contestants are planned, including:
    • A reception for contestants, teachers, parents, etc.
    • A tour of Kennedy Space Flight Center.
    • All contestants who attend will be invited to display a poster of their work.
    • The highest ranking winners attending will be invited to give an oral presentation.
    • The highest scoring attending winner(s) will receive the NSS Student Space Settlement of the Year Award
    These activities are not yet finalized and may change. Nonetheless, this is a tremendous opportunity to present your work, meet some of the most important people in space development as well as your fellow contestants, and have a great time. If you plan to attend the conference, please contact nss-students@comcast.net. This is the contact for poster space instructions, oral presentation times, and all other contest-related conference issues. Note: Contestants are responsible for all travel and conference expenses, including any fees associated with the reception and tour.
  • Contest categories are individual 6-9 grade, small group 6-9 grade, large group 6-9 grade, individual 10-12 grade, small group 10-12 grade, and large group 10-12 grade. An additional category based on artistic and literary merit is also included in the contest.
  • There will be a special Life Support category this year. Entries with strength in life support and/or describe biology laboratories and experiments that take advantage of variable psuedo-gravity levels and the radiation environment inside space colonies will be considered for this category.
  • Contestants give NASA the right to publish their submissions without restriction as a condition for entering the contest.

Here are some of the grand prize entries from previous years:

Student Art Gallery

Rules

  • The submission must be the student's own work. Plagiarism is forbidden. You may quote short passages, but material copied from a source must be surrounded in double quotes (") and the source indicated. For example: "This material copied from somewhere," My Favorite Space Book. Copied materials should rarely be more than a few lines, and never longer than a few paragraphs. Quoting long passages is forbidden. Entries caught plagiarizing will be rejected and disposed of. In 2007, twelve entries were caught copying materials from the web. They were eliminated from the competition.
  • Instructors, mentors or parents may assist the student in presenting relevant resources, discussing core concepts and editing, but the work itself, must be entirely student driven.
  • Submissions must relate to orbital colonies. Colonies may not be on a planet or moon. Colonies must be permanent, relatively self-sufficient homes, not temporary work camps.
  • If your entry is longer that 10-20 pages, consider including a one page executive summary on the best features of your entry. Be sure to include original ideas, major focus, and any parts particularly well done in the executive summary. This will help the judges find the best parts of your entry.
  • Avoid including technical material not directly related to your space settlement. This is a space settlement contest and marginally related material will make it difficult for the judges. If they can't find your space settlement elements easily you won't score well.
  • If you have a large, extensive entry, include a one-page summary of the highlights of your work. This will help the judges.
  • Submissions must be made in hard copy. No electronic submissions are accepted under any circumstances. This includes Power Point presentations, discs, CD's, DVD, videos or anything but paper.
  • An entry form with the appropriate information must be included with the submission. Fill out all fields unless you are not part of a school class. In this case, leave out the teacher and school information.
  • Designs, essays, stories, models, artwork and any other orbital space settlement materials will be considered.
  • Always include a bibliography.

Resources and Tips

  • Refer to the NASA Ames Space Settlement Page
  • Refer to the NSS Space Settlement Library
  • Use the space colony designer's corner.
  • Use the space settlement teacher's page.
  • Refer to the NSS Library.
  • Generic Earth Orbiting Space Settlement Requirements by Anita Gale.
  • Models are hard to handle and expensive to ship. Consider sending pictures of your model. If you must send the whole model, make it strong. Fragile models are frequently demolished during shipping or transport. Submissions are not returned. NASA is not responsible for the loss or damage to any submission.
  • Do your best to get the science right.
  • Make your design as quantitative as possible.
  • Include a bibliography. We want to know where you got your ideas and materials.
  • Be creative. Surprise the judges. Put something of your own personality into your work.
  • Consider designing a colony that you would really like to live in.
  • Consider alternate possibilities and clearly describe why you made the choices you did.
  • Present your material clearly and neatly.
  • When you discuss someone else's ideas or work, even if you don't copy their wording, reference it. We recommend a reference format along the lines of "[author year]." For example, you might write:
    Small children will be required not to be allowed in the center of the cylinder since radiation levels are minimized near the hull [Horia 2005].
    Then in the References section at the end of your paper put:
    [Horia 2005] Horia Mihail Teodorescu and Al Globus, "Radiation Passive Shield Analysis and Design for Space Applications, "SAE 2005 Transactions Journal of Aerospace.
  • Use the entry form, if we don't know who you are we won't be able to send you your prizes and certificates. Be sure to attach a copy of the entry form to each part of your submission. For example, if you have a report and artwork, attach an entry form to each so that if they get separated during handling, we will be able to put them back together.
  • Submissions must be received by March 31, 2009.
  • Have fun.
 

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