Âé¶¹ÉçÇø

Âé¶¹ÉçÇøP places third in First Nations national rocket competition

/
News
Mace Velarde, Bryan Martinez, Caleb Locklear (co-captain), Sydney Allen, Alex Velarde (captain), Micah Ferguson, Benjamin Savage
The Âé¶¹ÉçÇøP Rocket Team members are: Mace Velarde (left) Bryan Martinez, Caleb Locklear (co-captain), Sydney Allen, Alex Velarde (captain), Micah Ferguson, Benjamin Savage. Not pictured is Eric Schwartz.

Âé¶¹ÉçÇø Pembroke placed third in the Mars Challenge at the 13th annual First Nations Launch National Rocket Competition in Wisconsin April on 22-24 in Wisconsin.

The competition is open to students attending a tribal college or university, a Native American-Serving Nontribal Institution (NASNTI), or members of an active American Indian Science and Engineering Society collegiate chapter. Students designed, built and flew a high-powered rocket launched at the Richard Bong State Recreational Area.

The competition allows students to demonstrate engineering and design skills through direct application in high-powered rocketry.  

Âé¶¹ÉçÇøP Rocket Team members are Alex Velarde (captain), Caleb Locklear (co-captain), Mace Velarde, Bryan Martinez, Sydney Allen, Micah Ferguson and Benjamin Savage. Eric Schwartz is a member but was unable to make the trip.

The team also placed third in the oral presentation portion of the competition and took home a $1,000 cash prize. Âé¶¹ÉçÇøP also took home the Altitude Award.

The Mars Engineering Challenge––the highest level of competition––tasks team members with designing and constructing a dual deploy high-power rocket with a cold gas thruster system.

The Mars Challenge consisted of student teams from Âé¶¹ÉçÇøP, Northern Arizona University, University of Washington, Queens University and Fort Lewis College. NASA’s Wisconsin Space Grant Consortium supports first Nations Launch.