Space Travel News  
Students Rack Up Wins At Local Robotics Competition

The Titanium team from San Marino High School (on the left) compete with the Iron Eagles (in the middle), from Verbum Dei High School, and the Circuit Breakers, from Clark Magnet High School (on the right). Image credit: NASA/JPL
by Staff Writers
Pasadena CA (SPX) Mar 15, 2007
A high school robotics team sponsored by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., was one of three teams capturing top honors at this year's Los Angeles regional FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology) robotics competition.

Hope Chapel Academy in Hermosa Beach, Calif., shares the regional championship with Bellarmine College Preparatory, San Jose, and High Tech High School in Los Angeles. The teams are invited to compete against teams from around the world at the FIRST robotics championship at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, April 12 through 14.

Another JPL-sponsored team, Clark Magnet High School in La Crescenta, made it to the final round, along with a team from Campbell Hall School in North Hollywood, and a team that included Shuttleworth Academy, Delphi Academy and Renaissance Academy in Los Angeles.

About 30 JPL engineers helped students build their robots and provided technical advice during the competition, held this past weekend at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. JPL sponsored nine of the 51 teams participating in the competition. NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., sponsored Bellarmine College Preparatory.

Hope Chapel Academy has won the Los Angeles regional competition four times and was national champion in 2005. JPL engineer Rob Steele has been an advisor to the school's "Beach Bot" team for 11 years. He says each year the competition has an interesting challenge

"This year we had to modify our robot because it was too heavy," Steele said. "When we came into the competition, we were 7 pounds overweight, so we had to remove one of the motors. Later we learned the two motors were actually fighting with each other, so when we removed one of them, the robot actually worked much better."

In this year's game, "Rack 'N' Roll" robots grabbed colored floatation rings and placed them on a 10-foot-high circular rack anchored at the center of the arena. Teams scored bonus points if their robots returned to their home zones and were lifted by another robot in their alliance team, before the match ended.

"This is the best experience available for high school students in the country," said Amir Abo-Shaeer, advisor to the JPL-sponsored Dos Pueblos High School team from Goleta, Calif. "You're competing against the game. It's competitive and cooperative," he said. "There's no sport like it."

Other JPL/NASA-sponsored teams also won several awards at the regional competition:

+ Driving Tomorrow's Technology Award - Clark Magnet High School
+ Judges Award - Bellarmine College Preparatory and West Covina High School
+ Industrial Safety Award - Foshay Learning Center, Los Angeles

Related Links
Robotics at NASA
All about the robots on Earth and beyond!
All about the robots on Earth and beyond!



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Novel Salamander Robot Crawls Its Way Up The Evolutionary Ladder
Lausanne, France (SPX) Mar 09, 2007
A group of European researchers has developed a spinal cord model of the salamander and implemented it in a novel amphibious salamander-like robot. The robot changes its speed and gait in response to simple electrical signals, suggesting that the distributed neural system in the spinal cord holds the key to vertebrates' complex locomotor capabilities.







  • General Atomics Scores Power Production First
  • ISRO May Use Kerosene As Rocket Fuel
  • Sea Launch Explosion Due To Engine Failure
  • Italy Tests Prototype Of Unmanned Space Shuttle Castore

  • Official Opening Of The Soyuz Launch Base Construction Site In French Guiana
  • Canadian Satellite Given Final Checks At Russian Launch Pad
  • First Ariane 5 Launch Of 2007 Finally Gets Away
  • United Launch Alliance Successfully Launches First USAF Atlas 5

  • Repairs Underway Of Hail Damaged Shuttle External Tank
  • Shuttle Back In Vehicle Assembly Building
  • Space Shuttle Atlantis Rolls Back
  • Fuel To Be Removed From Space Shuttle

  • ISS Orbit To Be Adjusted March 16
  • Station Crew Perform Experiments Related To Human Adaptation To Space
  • South Korean Astronauts For Flight To ISS Start Training
  • No Adjustment To ISS Orbit Due To Atlantis Launch Postponement

  • The Story Of Women In Space
  • Russia To Shut Down Svobodny Space Centre
  • NASA To Host Space University Session
  • JAXA Hosts Kyoto Workshop For Global Space Exploration Strategy

  • Russian Court Upholds Custody For Space Firm Chief Reshetin
  • China Unveils New Space Science Plan
  • Homemade Suit For Chinese Spacewalk
  • China To Prioritize Three Areas In Space Program

  • Students Rack Up Wins At Local Robotics Competition
  • Talking Bots
  • Novel Salamander Robot Crawls Its Way Up The Evolutionary Ladder
  • Look Ma, No Hands, No Humans

  • NASA Mars Rover Churns Up Questions With Sulfur-Rich Soil
  • JPL Animators Create Detailed Fly Over Of Victoria Crater With Opportunity At Work
  • Onward To The Valley Without Peril
  • Early Mars Had Underground Water System

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement