NASA Highlights Student Participants in Spacesuit Technology Challenge

Editor’s Note: This advisory was updated on June 8 to update the start time of the event.

Media are invited to attend virtual student presentations for the NASA Spacesuit User Interface Technology for Students (NASA SUITS) challenge at 12 p.m. EDT Thursday, June 11.

NASA SUITS, one of NASA’s Artemis Student Challenges, tasks teams of college and university students to design and create spacesuit information displays within augmented reality environments. The challenge provides students with an authentic engineering design experience that will engage them in the innovative science critical to NASA’s Artemis program, which will land the first woman and the next man on the Moon in 2024.The students’ work with the challenge may improve how astronauts communicate with mission control on the ground as they perform moonwalks. These human-autonomy enabling technologies are necessary for the increased demands of lunar surface exploration.

Media will be able to view the presentations using Microsoft Teams collaborations software and will have the opportunity to ask questions following the presentations. Media who wish to attend virtually must contact Wendy Avedisian in the newsroom at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston by 5 p.m. Wednesday, June 10, either by phone at 281-483-5111 or e-mail at wendy.k.avedisian@nasa.gov for instructions on how to join.

Student teams participating in the 2020 challenge include:

Artemis Student Challenges are managed by the NASA’s Office of STEM Engagement. The program helps support the agency education policy of using NASA’s unique missions and programs to engage and encourage students to pursue science, technology, engineering, and math careers.

To learn more about NASA SUITS, visit:

https://www.nasa.gov/stem/artemis.html

For more information about NASA’s STEM Engagement programs, visit:

https://www.nasa.gov/stem/
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