Bulletin
1 13
October
Out of
this world
Welcome to Telecom Space Explorers.
For the next seven weeks well be taking you out of
this world on a virtual adventure in space.
Well be talking to NASA
astronauts and other space experts to find out more about
our universe and what its like to travel in
space.
Introducing
. . . Anne-Marie Robinson
This weeks audioconference guest
speaker is Anne-Marie Robinson.
Anne-Marie has a burning desire to be
an astronaut - a dream shes had since she was a child.
She has visited NASA many times and is also the United
States Space Camp Ambassador to New Zealand.
To help her fulfil her dream of
becoming an astronaut Anne-Marie attended a two-week course
at the US Space Academy in Alabama in 1991 where she learnt
about various aspects of space travel. She met recruitment
officials at the Johnson Space Centre (NASA) in Texas and
says a highlight of the trip was seeing the space shuttle
Atlantis take off from Cape Kennedy. Anne-Marie has her
private pilots licence and worked as a flight
attendant. She is currently studying for a bachelors degree
but says having American citizenship would really help her
achieve her life-long ambition.
Anne-Marie is currently the Marketing
Manager at Christchurchs Air Force World Museum. In
her role as Space Camp Ambassador she travels around the
country telling people about space and demonstrating some
space-related activities and science experiments.
For all you budding astronauts who
want to find out more about Space Camp, here's Anne-Marie
Robinson*s contact details:
Anne Marie Robinson
United States Space Camp Ambassador to New Zealand
c/o Private Bag 4739
Christchurch
Fax 0-3-343 9533
Take
your pick
For the Space Explorers module
well be holding ten weekly audioconferences so you can
choose to listen to the one that best suits your
timetable.
You can choose from
Wednesday: 10.30am, 11.30am, 1.30pm,
2.30pm
Thursday: 10am, 11am, noon,
2pm
Friday: noon, 1.30pm
Space
homepage
Check out the Space Explorers homepage
for information relating to this adventure, including links
to other space related sites. The page will be continually
updated throughout the programme.
You can have your space art or written
work published on the homepage by emailing it to Danielle
Greig on danielle.greig@telecom.co.nz or faxing the
Adventure Line on Wellington 0800 253-020.
To get to Telecoms Space
Explorers homepage, first go to the Telecom Education
Foundation homepage (address: http://www.telecom.co.nz/tef)
click on the Explorers and Adventurers pointer and
youll see the Space Explorers button. Dont
forget to bookmark the site.
On
the web
For those of you with Internet access,
here are a couple of space sites you might want to check
out. There are hundreds out there and each week well
give you three or four. If you find sites you think are
good, how about letting us know so we can share them with
everyone taking part?
Activities:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/amazing-space.html
http://lsda.jsc.nasa.gov/
just_for_kids.html
Teacher
resources:
http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/codef/education/
(Welcome to NASA's Education Program)
http://ssdoo.gsfc.nasa.gov/education/temp/materials.html
(Classroom and Science Project Materials)
http://adc.gsfc.nasa.gov/mw/milkyway.html
(Multiwavelength Milky Way)
Glossary:
http://www.hawastsoc.org/solar/eng/terms.htm
Planets:
http://pds.jpl.nasa.gov/planets/welcome.htm
http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/photo_gallery/photogallery.html
http://www.hawastsoc.org/solar/eng/homepage.htm
http://www.deepspace.ucsb.edu/ia/nineplanets/intro.html
Frequently
asked questions about space
Each week well give you a couple
of the most common questions people ask about
space.
Question: Why send
people into space when robotic spacecraft usually cost
less?
Answer: Humans and
robots each have their own special roles in space. Robots
are best for missions that require precise, repetitive
measurements or movements, and for missions that last for
a long time, such as trips to the outer planets. Humans
remain better equipped than robots for tasks that involve
decision-making or constant adjustments. By launching
humans into space, we also gain understandings into the
workings of the human body, many of which are changed by
gravity when a person is on the earth.
Question: Can the Space
Shuttle fly to the moon?
Answer: No, the shuttle
is designed to travel to low earth orbit (within a few
hundred miles of the earth's surface). It does not carry
enough fuel to leave earth orbit and travel to the moon.
The shuttle also is not designed to land on the moon
since it lands like an airplane and the moon has no
atmosphere.
Space
activity - Creative
Story Writing
Make up a large earth, moon and sun as
a wall display and pin a drawing or model of a rocket onto
the Earth. Move the rocket progressively each day so that it
gradually makes its way to land on the moon.
Read stories about space and the moon,
and gather together a series of related fiction books on the
topic that children are able to access at any time for
independent reading. Discuss what it must be like to be able
to travel to another planet - talk about all the dangers,
thrills and challenges space explorers and adventurers must
be able to overcome to be successful in their
endeavours.
Collect words from the class relating
to space travel and adventure on individual cards and place
them in a "Space Words Box" or envelope. After a while, pin
these to your large Earth - Moon drawing to act as a word
bank for the creative writing task.
Make up a story starter sheet with a
title like "5 ... 4 ... 3 ... 2... 1 ... ". This story
starter sheet could include a beginning line designed as an
idea starter for a creative story about taking a trip to the
moon. Read the stories out when completed.
Planet
Profile
All about . . .
Mercury
Mercury is the closest planet to the
sun. Its average distance from the sun is approximately 58
million km. It has a diameter of 4875 km. Mercurys
volume and mass are about that of the earth and its average
density is approximately equal to that of the earth.
Mercury revolves about the sun in a
period of 88 days. Its surface consists of rough, porous,
dark-coloured rock and this means it is a poor reflector of
sunlight. Its atmosphere contains sodium and
potassium.
The Mariner 10 spacecraft passed
Mercury twice in 1974 and once in 1975 and sent back
pictures of a moonlike, crater-pocked surface and reported
temperatures to be about 430° C on the sunlit side and
about -180° C on the dark side.
In 1991 powerful radio telescopes on
earth revealed unmistakable signals of vast sheets of ice in
Mercury's polar regions, areas that had not been covered by
Mariner 10.
On
the Mir beat
U.S. Astronaut Michael Foale arrived
back on earth last week after spending four and a half
months on the Russian space station MIR
Foales 145 days in
weightlessness made his muscles and bones weaker; it will be
a while before he feels normal moving around under full
gravity.
After such a long time in space,
subsisting on U.S. and Russian rations that included jellied
fish, irradiated steak and re-hydratable chicken consomm,
Foale requested beer, pizza and a lot of
chocolate.
Foale was on the 11-year-old space
station when it suffered its worst accident ever. During a
test of a manual docking system on June 25, a re-supply
craft went out of control and collided with Mir, smashing a
solar panel and putting as many as seven holes into the
Spektr science module. To stop the Spektr from leaking air
into space, the crew sealed off the module, but in the
process disconnected more than a dozen vital power
cables.
Have a look at these on the
web:
http://www.maximov.com/mir/mir2.html
http://space.magnificent.com/
Did
you see . . .
Did you see the item on the television
news last week about two little British boys who were
allergic to sunlight? The two brothers break out in severe
blisters after only minutes in the sun.
NASA has provided the pair with small
versions of their space suits which means they can play
outside and take part in activities most children
enjoy.
Explorers
mystery quiz - Bulletin 1
Answer the Explorers Mystery Quiz
questions below correctly and be in to win a Panasonic
cassette recorder for your class. You will find the answer
to this weeks first question on your Explorers and
Adventurers Mystery Trail poster. You might need to do a bit
more research to answer question two. Fax your answers to
the Telecom Adventure Line: 0800 253-020. Entries close at
5pm on Friday 17 October.
The classes whose students correctly
answer the most Explorers Mystery Quizzes during the
Explorers and Adventurers programme will go into the draw
for a grand prize in December. So good luck
everyone.
Question
one: Name the nine
planets in earths solar system.
Question two:
Approximately how many
stars are visible to the naked eye from
earth?
Well announce this weeks
quiz winner along with the answers in next weeks
bulletin.
Keep
in touch
If youve got an inquiry or want
more information about the Space Explorers programme, the
best way to get in touch with Danielle is through the
Adventure Line fax (0800 253-020) or email her on:
danielle.greig@telecom.co.nz
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