CONTOUR Challenge Winners Persevere Without Spacecraft
by Jeremy McGovern
astronomy.com
September 2002
The Comet Nucleus Tour (CONTOUR) mission suffered a devastating loss last
month when their spacecraft fell silent. The disappearance certainly affects
the work of the CONTOUR researchers, but how will the spacecraft's status
shape the plans of CONTOUR Comet Challenge winners?
Earlier this year, a public outreach effort called the CONTOUR Comet
Challenge encouraged teams of one teacher and one student to develop
projects that would share their interest in comets and newfound knowledge
about CONTOUR with their communities. Four winning teams received outreach
materials and traveled to Cape Canaveral to view the launch of the CONTOUR
spacecraft. Each team also received $1,000 to implement its project after
the launch.
The loss of the spacecraft affected the morale more than the research of one
winning project, "Rural Space Science Challenge."
"The fact that we met the people involved in this mission makes its loss
more strongly felt," relays Chris Peterson, a science teacher at Guffey
Community Charter School in Colorado. "We were very close to the project,
and even imaged the spacecraft in its final orbit before the burn that was
to take it to Comet Encke."
Peterson and his former student Matthew Smith still plan to present a series
of talks in their rural area and at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science.
With the loss of CONTOUR, the details of their talks will change somewhat,
but rather than focusing heavily on the CONTOUR mission and its
instrumentation, they will concentrate on comets in general and what
scientists hope to learn from them.
Now that Peterson and Smith are unable to rely on CONTOUR's instrumentation
for information as initially planned, they hope to rely on the CONTOUR team
instead.
"Although no data from the CIDA (Comet Impact Dust Analyzer) instrument will
be received, I have established a good relationship with a principal
investigator for the CIDA, and no doubt that will prove a valuable resource
in the future," Peterson explains.
"Cool Comets," a project by student Andrea Sease and instructor Marilou
Bebak of the Nardin Academy High School in Buffalo, New York, has been
affected only slightly by CONTOUR's disappearance. They're planning a
presentation for the Buffalo Museum of Science, where both work part-time.
Tied in with the museum's Winter Wonderland program, Sease and Bebak's focus
will be on comets as "dirty snowballs." With a hands-on display, workshops,
and a PowerPoint presentation, their goal is to educate the public on
comets' make-up, solar interaction, and orbital paths.
"I had actually finished the PowerPoint presentation before I learned the
spacecraft was lost," Sease says.
For "Cool Comets," CONTOUR was to serve primarily as a public awareness
tool.
"After people come to the museum, see our presentation and become excited
about comets as cool things, my hope was that they would look in the press
for news about the CONTOUR mission as it came out," says Bebak. "I was
looking for CONTOUR to make people more aware of the importance of space
exploration."
Although an important spacecraft vanished, along with the potential for
valuable discoveries, Bebak is quick to point out a valuable lesson.
"Unfortunately, people get the impression that everything must work
perfectly or the knowledge isn't valuable. Science doesn't work like that.
It's as I always tell my students, we learn from our mistakes."
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