Sixteen payloads from K-12 schools and educational organizations throughout Colorado have been confirmed to fly on United Launch Alliance’s Future Heavy intern rocket this summer. The 53-foot-tall, high-power sport rocket launch will take place at Spaceport America, New Mexico, on Saturday, June 24, during its annual Spaceport American Cup International Intercollegiate Rocket Engineering Competition in association with ESRA the Experimental Sounding Rocket Association.

Since 2009, ULA has teamed up with Ball Aerospace to offer its interns a real-world space industry experience by launching rockets and payloads (onboard instruments/experiments deployed after launch) they volunteer to build during their internships.
In 2010, the program expanded to include payloads from K-12 students.

“Unique opportunities such as this help ignite the imagination of our future rocket scientists,” said Tory Bruno, ULA president and CEO. “The important life lessons of planning, teamwork and hard work to ensure the payloads are built on-time and function as designed, will translate directly to their future endeavors.”

Winning proposals include:

Peak to Peak Charter School Payloads Lafayette, CO
– Make it or Break It
– Kindergarten Parachutes
– Kevlar Cases: Reliable Phone Protection?
– Descent Power Recovery System
– Folding Wing Glider
        
Boulder High School Payloads  Boulder, CO
– America’s Ride Back from Space
– Falling in 360 Video
        
STEM Academy Payload   Highlands Ranch, CO
– Round Two Design Two (R2D2)
      
Smokey Hill Area Robotics Club Payload  Centennial, CO
– MARVIn  Multiple Advanced Reentry Vehicles Inside
        
Girl Scouts of Colorado Rocketry Team Payload  Colorado Springs, CO
– G Swarm
– Team 2
        
Boy Scout Troop 127 Payload  Aurora, CO
– EDGE (Eagles Deserving Gratitude for Excellence)
        
Eaglecrest High School Payloads  Centennial, CO
– Raptor View
        
Crown Point Academy Payloads  Westminster, CO
– Flying Zucchini, 8th Grade
– Little Rockets, 4th Grade
        
STEM School Payload  Highlands Ranch, CO
– IMALLSHOOKUP
          
“We are thrilled to provide the launch platform for these bright students to perform their research and experiments,” said Greg Arend, who serves as the ULA mentor and leader of the launch project. “It is an amazing time to be in the space industry. ULA is transforming the launch industry and these students will be the innovators and designers that will develop new technologies not yet imagined.”
          
Arend recently received the Distinguished Engineering Educator Award by the Engineers’ Council for his work with ULA’s intern rocket program over the last five years. Over that time, hundreds of interns across all five of ULA’s sites participated in this unique, hands-on STEM activity and worked to build Future Heavy, the world’s largest high-powered sport rocket.
           
Tickets are on sale to attend the 2017 Spaceport America Cup at http://events.eventzilla.net/e/spaceport-america-cup-2017-2138897093.
With more than a century of combined heritage, United Launch Alliance is the nation’s most experienced and reliable launch service provider. ULA has successfully delivered more than 115 satellites to orbit that provide critical capabilities for troops in the field, aid meteorologists in tracking severe weather, enable personal device-based GPS navigation and unlock the mysteries of our solar system.
For more information on ULA, visit the ULA website at www.ulalaunch.com. Join the conversation at www.facebook.com/ulalaunch, twitter.com/ulalaunch, and instagram.com/ulalaunch.

Visit http://spaceportamericacup.com/ for more information about the Spaceport America Cup.  Social: https://www.facebook.com/spaceportamericacup/. Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BM09AOlmyuk.