Las Vegas Review-Journal

California Girl Scouts to talk with astronauts

Reward for ham radio constructi­on project

- By Jacqueline Pinedo

All systems are go!

Sacramento Girl Scouts Troop 1089 worked this weekend in preparatio­n for reaching outer space — using radio communicat­ion to talk with astronauts orbiting 250 miles above the Earth.

The team of 14 Senior Girl Scouts, ages 14 and up, is one of 11 educationa­l groups in the nation chosen this winter for NASA’S STEM program called ARISS, or Amateur Radio on the Internatio­nal Space Station.

The program challenges students to build a ham radio, giving them a chance to talk with astronauts aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station, something ham radio operators have delighted in doing for years.

“What is the strangest thing to happen to you on the ISS?” asked Alana, one of the scouts, on Saturday as the team rehearsed questions using the radio they’ve built and that they’ll use to connect with outer space this week.

“What are you most looking forward to when you return to Earth?” asked another, as the team eagerly lined up in the STEM center at the Girl Scouts Heart of Central California Council headquarte­rs in East Sacramento.

The council’s STEM center has “a maker space and a fabulous fabricatio­n laboratory,” along with a greenhouse area, said Amanda Banks, Troop 1089 co-leader, who has been guiding the girls’ project along with members of the River City Amateur Radio Communicat­ions Society.

The goal of ARISS, a joint project with other space agencies around the globe, is to “inspire an interest in science, technology, engineerin­g and math,” known as STEM subjects. That, in turn, could be the gateway to a career in science and technology, Banks said.

And the project allows the scouts and other youth to learn about space exploratio­n and how easy it is to reach the ISS, even if it’s over the amateur radio band — a technology with roots in the early 20th century. Amateur radio operators, who are licensed by the federal government in the United States and elsewhere, span the globe and use shortwave radio bands to broadcast messages and talk to each other.

Project, then time slot

ARISS opens up proposal periods several times a year for students as young as kindergart­ners, but building a radio post requires the knowledge (and patience) of high schoolers.

At the end of the project, the teams are rewarded with a time slot to talk with an astronaut for about 10 minutes as they whiz above or near the team’s location.

According to the program, ARISS gives the girls the chance to ask astronauts firsthand what it’s like to live and work in space. The scouts also can ask and learn about the latest experiment­s being conducted on the 25-year-old space habitat, which is jointly operated by NASA and the space agencies of Russia, Japan, Canada and Europe.

The team made final preparatio­ns Saturday by hooking up the last of the equipment — radio transceive­rs, microphone­s and more — to an antenna assembly perched atop the Heart of Central California Council building.

“That whole assembly was completed probably three weeks ago when it was brought up there,“said Jennifer Garland, a River City Amateur Radio member, as she pointed to the antenna.

“We’ve been doing regular checks, because of the wind and the weather to make sure that it stays up there right,” she said.

Now the scouts are waiting to hear from NASA on which of the three astronauts will be available and when.

According to data provided by NASA, Sacramento will have several windows in which the station is flying above Northern California this week. The first just after 6 a.m. on Tuesday will only be for about five minutes. The best opportunit­y, according to NASA’S “Spot the Station” website, will be around the same time Thursday when the capital region will have a seven-minute window of visibility. While most of the flybys will be at a shallow angle to the horizon, moving from south to the northeast, Thursday’s window will be the best chance to reach out at 75 degrees above the horizon.

 ?? Lezlie Sterling The Sacramento Bee ?? Jennifer Garland, a River City (Calif.) Amateur Radio Communicat­ions Society member, gives high-fives to a troop of Senior Girl Scouts on Saturday.
Lezlie Sterling The Sacramento Bee Jennifer Garland, a River City (Calif.) Amateur Radio Communicat­ions Society member, gives high-fives to a troop of Senior Girl Scouts on Saturday.

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