Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Students' Space Project Delayed By Oct. Rocket Crash Delayed Again

The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2015 10:56 AM
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A science project dreamed up by a group of students in central British Columbia that exploded on a rocket launching pad almost two months ago is on hold again.
     
    An unmanned SpaceX rocket was supposed to blast off before sunrise Tuesday but the countdown was halted with just one minute remaining.
     
    Officials said the problem was with motors needed for second-stage rocket thrust steering. If controllers had not aborted the launch, computers would have done so closer to flight time, NASA launch commentator George Diller said.
     
    The soonest SpaceX can try again to send the rocket to the International Space Station is Friday.
     
    Four boys from McGowan Park Elementary School in Kamloops, B.C., had won a contest to have their experiment join 17 other student projects from across North American on a trip to the orbiting station.
     
    But the amateur experiments — along with a payload of supplies destined for the space station — were destroyed on Oct. 28 when a NASA-contracted rocket exploded in a spectacular fireball in eastern Virginia.
     
    If and when the Kamloops students' experiment gets to the station, it will examine how the zero-gravity environment of space affects the growth of crystals.
     
    The students prepared silicon tubes containing solutions that, when mixed, cause crystals to form. On the space station, astronauts would remove small clips keeping the solutions apart. When the tubes returned, the students would analyze the crystals and compare them to crystals grown on Earth.
     
    The projects are part of the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program, which is run by the Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Space Education.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Brothers jailed for 'relentless attack' in online cyberbullying of 14-year-old

    Brothers jailed for 'relentless attack' in online cyberbullying of 14-year-old
    DAUPHIN, Man. — Two Manitoba brothers have been sentenced to 16 months in jail for tormenting and sexually exploiting a 14-year-old girl online.

    Brothers jailed for 'relentless attack' in online cyberbullying of 14-year-old

    More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

    More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley
    VANCOUVER — Officials with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency are expected to release more details on an avian flu virus that has forced the quarantine of four poulty farms in British Columbia's Fraser Valley.

    More details expected on avian flu outbreak in B.C.'s Fraser Valley

    RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges

    RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges
    The RCMP alleges the teenager had committed a robbery at the direction of and for the benefit of an unspecified terrorist organization.

    RCMP charge Montreal boy, 15, with terror-related charges

    Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed

    Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed
    TORONTO — An Ontario court has dismissed an appeal by the federal government that sought to quash a class action lawsuit which claims a devastating loss of cultural identity was suffered by Ontario children caught in the so-called "60s scoop."

    Court dismisses government's appeal to scrap 60s scoop class action, suit to proceed

    Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?

    Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?
    The Conservative government has been under fire in recent weeks for a growing backlog of 11,000 social security cases, most involving ailing or injured Canadians denied Canada Pension Plan disability benefits and waiting for their appeals to be heard.

    Baloney Meter: Was government really blindsided by tribunal backlog?

    Senators challenge name, need for Tories' new bill on cultural practices

    Senators challenge name, need for Tories' new bill on cultural practices
    OTTAWA — The need for and even the name of a new Conservative bill aimed at barring polygamous and forced marriages came under criticism Thursday in the Senate.

    Senators challenge name, need for Tories' new bill on cultural practices