- Tell the purpose of space exploration and include the following:
- Historical reasons,
- Immediate goals in terms of specific knowledge,
- Benefits related to Earth resources, technology, and new products.
- International relations and cooperation
- Design a collector's card, with a picture on the front and information on the back, about your favorite space pioneer. Share your card and discuss four other space pioneers with your counselor.
- Build, launch, and recover a model rocket.* Make a second launch
to accomplish a specific objective. (Rocket must be built to meet the
safety code of the National
Association of Rocketry. See the "Model Rocketry" chapter.) Identify
and explain the following rocket parts:
- Body tube
- Engine mount
- Fins
- Igniter
- Launch lug
- Nose cone
- Payload
- Recovery system
- Rocket engine
- Discuss and demonstrate each of the following:
- The law of action-reaction.
- How rocket engines work
- How satellites stay in orbit
- How satellite pictures of Earth and pictures of other planets are made and transmitted.
- Do TWO of the following:
- Discuss with your counselor a robotic space exploration mission and a historic crewed mission. Tell about each mission's major discoveries, its importance, and what was learned from it about the planets, moons, or regions of space explored.
- Using magazine photographs, news clippings, and electronic articles (such as from the Internet), make a scrapbook about a current planetary mission.
- Design a robotic mission to another planet or moon , moon, comet, or asteroid that will return samples of its surface to Earth. Name the planet or moon , moon, comet, or asteroid your spacecraft will visit. Show how your design will cope with the conditions of the planet's or moon's environment environments of the planet, moon, comet, or asteroid.
- Describe the purpose and operation of ONE of the following:
- Space shuttle or any other crewed orbital vehicle, whether government owned (U.S. or foreign) or commercial
- International Space Station
- Design an inhabited base located within our solar system, such as
Titan, asteroids, or other locations that humans might want to explore
in person. Make drawings or a model of your base. In your design, consider
and plan for the following:
- Source of energy
- How it will be constructed
- Life-support system
- Purpose and function
- Discuss with your counselor two possible careers in space exploration that interest you. Find out the qualifications, education, and preparation required and discuss the major responsibilities of those positions.
* If local laws prohibit the launching of model rockets, do the following activity: Make a model of a NASA rocket. Explain the functions of the parts. Give the history of the rocket.
BSA Advancement ID#:
107
Requirements last updated in:
2020
Pamphlet Publication Number:
35983
Pamphlet Stock (SKU) Number:
654567
Pamphlet Revision Date:
2016
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Page updated on: November 18, 2021