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‘Great Moonbuggy Race’ Registration Now Open

October 18, 2010 — Four decades after the first NASA lunar rover rolled across the surface of the moon, innovative students are preparing to design and build a new generation of wheeled wonders.

Registration is open for the 18th annual NASA Great Moonbuggy Race, set for April 1-2, 2011, in Huntsville, Alabama. Participating schools and institutions may register one or two vehicles and teams. Registration closes February 1.

For complete rules, vehicle design parameters and registration for the race, visit http://moonbuggy.msfc.nasa.gov

NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center organizes the races held at the U.S. Space & Rocket Center, both in Huntsville. The event challenges high school and college students to design, build and race lightweight, human-powered "moonbuggies."

The first rover was developed, built and tested at Marshall in just 17 months. The rover's inaugural trip across the moon's surface took place on July 31, 1971. And it was driven by Apollo 15 astronauts David Scott and James Irwin. Two more rovers followed, enabling expanded scientific exploration during the Apollo 16 and 17 missions in 1972.

The NASA Great Moonbuggy Race teams carry on the tradition of engineering ingenuity. The teams attempt to post the fastest vehicle assembly and race times in their divisions, while incurring the fewest penalties on a challenging course simulating the rocky, unforgiving surface of the moon.

Prizes are awarded to the three teams in each division that finish with the fastest race times. In 2010, for the first time, the victors in the high school and college divisions were both from outside the continental United States. The International Space Education Institute of Leipzig, Germany, raced to a winning time of just 3 minutes, 37 seconds in the high school category. The University of Puerto Rico in Humacao, the only school to enter a moonbuggy every year since the races began in 1994, won the college division with a time of 4 minutes, 18 seconds.

Participation in the race has increased from just eight college teams in 1994 to more than 70 high school and college national and international teams in 2010. The high school division was added in 1996.

More than 32,000 people watched live, streaming coverage of the 2010 race on UStream, an interactive, real-time webcasting platform. For archived footage of the competition, click here.

 



Racers from the International Space Education Institute in Leipzig, Germany, won first place in the high school division of NASA's 17th annual Great Moonbuggy Race. The school has competed each year since 2007.
Photo credit: NASA/MSFC


Racers from the University of Puerto Rico in Humacao won first place in the college division of NASA's 17th annual Great Moonbuggy Race in April 2010. Photo credit: NASA/MSFC


Racers from Fajardo Vocational High School of Humacao, Puerto Rico, took home the second-place trophy in the2010 high school division. Photo credit: NASA/MSFC





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