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American Rocketry Challenge

American Rocketry Challenge

American Rocketry Challenge Finals, 2010.
American Rocketry Challenge Finals Range in 2010.

The American Rocketry Challenge is an annual American model rocketry competition for students in grades six to 12 sponsored by the Aerospace Industries Association and the National Association of Rocketry. Co-sponsors include NASA, United States Department of Defense, the American Association of Physics Teachers and the Civil Air Patrol. Previously known as the "Team America Rocketry Challenge," the name was changed following the 2019 event.

President Obama meets with Team America Rocketry Challenge team members from Presidio, Texas in 2012 White House Science Fair.

The event receives local and national media coverage and usually draws well-known representatives of the Defense Department, NASA, the FAA, and other government agencies. Past National Fly-Offs have been attended by United States Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, Rocket Boys author Homer Hickam, former NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe, U.S. Senator Mike Enzi, and former NASA Administrator, Charles Bolden.

The 2010, 2011, 2013, 2015, 2016, and 2017 International Fly-Offs were won by the American winners of TARC.{{Cite web | access-date = 29 February 2016

History

The competition began in 2002 celebration of 100th anniversary of the flight, but due to a high level of interest became an annual occurrence. ARC fosters interest in aerospace engineering careers among its participants, and the National Fly-Off in May is an opportunity for corporations, universities, and the armed services to attract students. The program rebranded in 2019 to the American Rocketry Challenge.

Requirements

The requirements for each year's challenge are announced during the summer. Teams generally meet early in the school year, and must make official qualifying flights by early April. A team only has three chances to fly an official qualification attempt; only scores from flights that meet the contest requirements, are safe, and don't break the egg can be submitted. Typically, about 60 percent of participating teams submit at least one qualification score. The teams with the top 100 qualifying scores submitted in April compete in the National Fly-off that is held during May at Great Meadow in The Plains, Virginia.

ARC challenges students to design, build and launch rockets that can safely carry one, two, or three raw hen eggs (depending on the year's challenge) and consistently come very close to a specified flight altitude and duration. Success requires excellent design, workmanship, and altitude prediction, which means students can learn about engineering, aerodynamics, meteorology, and computer simulation through the program. Scores are calculated as deductions from the perfect flight; the lower the score, the better. The sum of the difference between altitude and the target altitude and four times the difference between duration and the target duration. Many teams consistently achieve scores less than 10.{{Cite web | access-date = 29 February 2016

Awards to winning teams

The top 10 teams receive a share of $100,000 in scholarships and prizes, and the top 25 teams are invited to submit a proposal for one of 15 spots in NASA's Student Launch Initiative. There are additional awards sponsored by AIA member corporations in various categories.

It is starting in 2008, the winners of the U.S. competition have been awarded a trip to either the Paris Air Show or the Farnborough Airshow, courtesy of Raytheon Company, to compete with the winners from other participating countries. The United Kingdom and France currently have similar competitions and compete in the international fly-offs; organizations from Germany, Canada and Japan are in the initial planning stages for starting their own competition.

Awards to the program

The program has picked up the following awards:

In 2013, Marion C. Blakey, President and CEO of the Aerospace Industries Association, and Susan Lavrakas, AIA’s Director of Workforce, received Aviation Week & Space Technology’s Laureate Award in the workforce category for the association’s outstanding STEM education activities, including the Team America Rocketry Challenge.

In 2014, the National Aeronautic Association named AIA and the National Association of Rocketry (NAR) the 2014 recipients of the Frank G. Brewer Trophy. The award serves to recognize an individual, a group of individuals, or an organization for significant contributions of enduring value to aerospace education in the United States.

In 2015, the National Coalition for Aviation and Space Education (NCASE) selected the Aerospace Industries Association and the National Association of Rocketry to receive its Dr. Mervin K. Strickler Aerospace Education Award, in recognition of their outstanding achievements in the field of aerospace education.{{Cite news | access-date = 29 February 2016

In 2021, the National Aviation Hall of Fame awarded their Spirit of Flight Award to ARC. "The Spirit of Flight Award recognizes organizations that serve a special need of the nation and set high standards by the utilization of aerospace assets. One of the most applicable of the criteria met by the American Rocketry Challenge is the “creativity” that voters of the Spirit of Flight Award are charged to identify."

Annual Contest Parameters and National Fly-Off Results

Contest YearNational Finals Launch DateParticipating TeamsEgg CountAltitude GoalDuration GoalOther Contest ParametersTeams with Qualifying FlightsFinals Cutoff ScoreNational Finals WinnerWinning scoreWinner Result at Int'lSpecial GuestsNotes
2002-03May 10, 200387321500 ft-Rocket must have two stages.275Boonsboro High School, Boonsboro, MD0U.S. Senator Mike Enzi, Rocket Boys author Homer Hickam, NASA Administrator Sean O'KeefeFirst annual TARC contest.
2003-04May 15, 200461021250 ft-Rocket must have two stages.201Penn Manor High School, Millersville, PA0U.S. Senator Mike Enzi, U.S. Astronauts Jay Apt and Charlie Walker, Estes Founder Vern EstesFlyover by two USMC F/A-18s
2004-05May 22, 20057121 or 2-60 s1 or 2 stages; bonus for more complex designs271Dakota County 4-H Federation, Farmington, MN0.1U.S. Astronaut Jay Apt, NASA Associate Administrator Adeena LostonFull scale Goddard rocket launch, USMC Presidential Helicopter Squadron flyover
2005-06May 20, 20066781800 ft45 s-39321.15Statesville Christian School, Statesville, NC1.79Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, Mars Exploration Rover Scientist Curt Niebur, Director of Defense Research and Engineering John Young, and NASA Associate Administrator Rex GevedenFlyover by 2 USMC AV-8B Harriers
2006-07May 19, 20076911850 ft45 s-30119.25Newark Memorial High School, Newark, CA1.86Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, and Astronaut Jay AptF-117 Nighthawk flyover.
2007-08May 17, 20086432750 ft45 sContest adopts new two round flyoff. Presentation competition introduced.34122.2Enloe High School (Team 2), Raleigh, NC(Flight 1) 17.64AIA President Marion Blakey, United States Secretary of the Air Force Michael WynneB-2 Spirit flyover.
2008-09May 16, 20096531750 ft45 sEgg must lay on its side.38217.6Madison West High School (Team 3), Madison, WI(Flight 1) 11.94AIA President Marion Blakey, United States Secretary of the Air Force Michael B. DonleyFlyover by T-38s.
2009-10May 15, 20106691825 ft45 sStreamer recovery for egg.33529.5Penn Manor High School (Team 1), Millersville, PA(Flight 1) 3United States Secretary of the Air Force Michael B. Donley, Director of Defense Research and Engineering Zachary Lemnios, Textron CEO Scott Donnelly, Duff Goldman of Ace of Cakes.Flyover by USAF Heritage Flight: P-51 Mustang, F-16 Falcon, and F-22 Raptor. High Power Rocket with Ace of Cakes payload.
2010-11May 15, 20116071750 ft40-45 sPortion of Rocket containing egg must return with 15in (38 cm) parachute.31815.87Rockwall-Heath High School (Team 1), Heath, TX(Flight 1) 14AIA President Marion Blakey
2011-12May 12, 20126782800 ft43-47 sStarting now, rockets limited to 650 grams total liftoff weight; motors limited to a single stage 80 N·s (F impulse).40913.2.Madison West High School (Team 1), Madison, WI(Flight 1) 10AIA President Marion Blakey, FAA Associate Administrator for Aviation Safety Margaret Gilligan, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering Zachary J. Lemnios, Kaman Corporation Chairman, President & Chief Executive Officer Neal J. Keating.
2012-13May 11, 20137351750 ft48-50 sPortion of Rocket containing egg must return with 15in (38 cm) parachute. Egg must lay on its side. External diameter of rocket must be no less than 60 mm.47016.12Georgetown 4H, Georgetown, TX(Flight 1) 5.36AIA President Marion Blakey, NASA Administrator Charles Bolden
2013-14May 10, 20147072825 ft48-50 sStarting now, best two of three scores summed to determine Finals qualifiers. Rocket must descend with all pieces tethered to two parachutes of the same size.41354.12Creekview High School (Team 1), Canton, GA(Flight 1) 6AIA President Marion Blakey, Chief Scientist of the United States Air Force Dr. Mica Endsley
2014-15May 9, 20156851800 ft46-48 sStarting now, rocket length at least 650 mm. Payload must descend separately with a single parachute. Second flight altitude goal at finals is 775 ft.40Russellville City School, Russellville, AL16.16CEO Aurora Flight Sciences John Langford, USAF Major General Martin Whelen, NASA Orion Program Executive Garth Henning, Lockheed Martin Vice President, Space & Missile Defense Programs Eric Thoemmes, Raytheon Vice President U.S. Business Development
2015-16May 14, 20162850 ft44-46 sRocket must descend with all pieces tethered to a single recovery device of the team's choosing. One egg to be carried perpendicular to the body's axis, the other to be parallel. Second flight altitude goal at finals is 825 ft; the duration goal is 43-45 s.Odle Middle School, Bellevue WA13.64
2016-17May 13, 20178121775 ft41-43 sMust use body tubes of two different diameters for their exterior structure. The smaller-diameter of the two must be used for the lower (motor and fin) end of the rocket and48931.17Festus High School, Festus MO13.84Brigadier General B. Chance “Salty” Saltzman, the Director of Future Operations, Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations of the U.S. Air Force, Rick Hunt, VADM (Ret.) Raytheon Vice President U.S. Business Development, Dave Machuga, Director and General Manager of Digital Receiver Technology, and William Van Order, LM Fellow at Lockheed Martin Enterprise Business Services.
2017-18May 12, 20182800 ft (244 m)41-43 sTwo body sections (BT-70 upper for eggs, BT-80 lower), recovering as one piece. Finals flight targets: Flight 1 800 ft in 41-43 s, then Flight 2 (either 775 ft in 40-42 s or 825 ft, in 42-44 s) by coin toss.Creekview High School, Canton GA21.2
2018-19May 18, 20193856 ft (261 m)43-46 sEgg capsule recovers separately under at least 2 same-shape parachutes (of diameters no more than 2 in difference) from booster section. Finals includes separate non-scoring contest for which rocket most closely resembles the Saturn V. Finals flight targets: Flight 1 856 ft in 43-46 s, then Flight 2 (either 831 ft in 42-45 s or 881 ft, in 44-47 s) by coin toss.Madison West High School (Team 2), Madison WI10Apollo 11 50th Anniversary competition. 856 ft because Armstrong set foot on the Moon at 8:56pm Houston time.
2019-20May 16, 20201800 ft (244 m)40-43 sFinals flight targets: 775 ft in 39-42 s and 825 ft in 41-44 s.NONE- National Final Fly-Off postponedNoneCOVID-19 lockdowns impacted most teams' ability to gather, build, and attempt qualifying flights, leading to cancelation of the Finals.
2020-21See Notes1800 ft (244 m)40-43 sFinals flight targets: 810 ft in 40-43 s and 860 ft in 42-45 s.Oregon Episcopal School, Portland OR7.7VIRTUAL FINALS
2021-22May 14, 20227242835 ft (254 m)41-44 sBody tubes of 2 different diameters, each no less than 6" long, recovering as one piece. Eggs oriented "sideways". Finals flight targets: 810 ft in 40-43 s and 860 ft in 42-45 s.47.58Newport High School - Team 2, Bellevue WA13
2022-23May 20, 20237981850 ft (259 m)42-45 sRocket recovers as two pieces (egg and altimeter in one, motor in the other), both under parachute. Finals flight targets: 825 ft in 41-44 s and 875 ft in 43-46 s.35Hardin Valley Academy Team 1, Knoxville TN13.4Astronaut Warren "Woody" Hoburg (addressed teams while aboard the International Space Station)
2023-24May 19, 20249221820 ft (250 m)43-46 sStarting now, Finals flights must finish in the same time range as qualifying flights. Rocket recovers as one piece. Finals flight targets: 800 ft in and 850 ft.32.12Tharptown High School, Russellville AL4 (3 + 1)2 (UK, USA, JPN, FRA)Astronaut Warren "Woody" HoburgJolly Logic Altimeter One and Altimeter Two added to approved altimeter list; PerfectFlite APRA dropped. Finals were delayed to Sunday due to weather for the first time.
2024-25May 17, 202510012790 ft (241 m)41-44 sRockets recover as 2 pieces. Eggs oriented sideways. Finals flight targets: 765 ft and 815 ft.28.6Boy Scout Troop 74, Montville NJ31.84 (16 + 15.84)1 (USA, UK, FRA, JPN)
2025-26May 16, 20261750 ft (228.6 m)36-39 sRocket airframe is 1 size (min. 47 mm / 1.85" diameter) and recovers as 1 piece. Egg oriented axially. Two Finals flight targets are somewhere between 725 ft and 775 ft, to be announced at Finals Pre-flight Meeting.

Notes

References

References

  1. Aerospace Industries Association. "Contest Background".
  2. Barber, Trip. (2006). "Team America Rocketry Challenge, 2006". Sport Rocketry.
  3. Barber, Trip. (2003). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2003". Sport Rocketry.
  4. Ebersole, Jenna. (July 26, 2010). "U.S. Penn Manor TARC rocket team tops in the world". Lancaster New Era.
  5. Aerospace Industries Association. "American Students Win International Rocket Contest Fly-Off".
  6. Roberts, Jen. (2017-09-13). "High school rocket club wins international competition in Paris".
  7. Barber, Trip. (2004). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2004". Sport Rocketry.
  8. "Aviation Week’s Laureate Awards Past Recipients".
  9. "AIA Receives Aviation Week & Space Technology Laureate Award for Workforce Development Activities". AIA.
  10. "THE AEROSPACE INDUSTRIES ASSOCIATION AND THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF ROCKETRY HONORED WITH BREWER TROPHY FOR AVIATION EDUCATION". National Aeronautic Association.
  11. "AIA and NAR recognized for significant STEM contributions". AIA.
  12. Team, The Rocket Contest. (2021-03-31). "The American Rocketry Challenge Receives the National Aviation Hall of Fame’s Spirit of Flight Award".
  13. Barber, Trip. (2005). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2005". Sport Rocketry.
  14. Barber, Trip. (2007). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2007". Sport Rocketry.
  15. Barber, Trip. (2008). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2008". Sport Rocketry.
  16. Barber, Trip. (2009). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2009". Sport Rocketry.
  17. Barber, Trip. (2010). "Team America Rocketry Challenge 2010". Sport Rocketry.
  18. Barber, Trip. (6 April 2012). "Top 100 Teams for TARC 2012".
  19. Aerospace Industries Association. "Contest rules for 2012".
  20. Duration errors are multiplied by two and added to altitude errors to get score
  21. Duration errors are multiplied by three and added to altitude errors to get score
  22. Duration errors are multiplied by four and added to altitude errors to get score
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