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Alaskan High Schoolers Help NASA Record, Share 'Earth Music'
by Steve Roy

 

March 05, 2005
Saturday


In the tiny town of North Pole, Alaska, the sun currently creeps into view for just three or four hours a day. Temperatures typically crash in February to minus-30 degrees Fahrenheit or lower. And bears aren't uncommon in these parts -- mother grizzlies have on occasion sheltered their cubs in the woods near the local high school.

But none of that can chill the enthusiasm of North Pole High School math teacher Dr. Curt Szuberla and his student team of aspiring scientists and engineers, who braved the elements this winter on NASA's behalf to scout locations for and build a very-low-frequency radio receiver, or VLF.


jpg northern lights - earth music

The aurora borealis, or "northern lights" -- captured here by Space Shuttle Endeavor astronauts in 1992 -- emits strong radio waves that can be translated into audible sound when channeled through very-low-frequency radio receivers. Dr. Curt Szuberla, a math teacher at North Pole High School in North Pole, Alaska, and a student team of aspiring engineers braved the elements this winter to build and install a VLF receiver that will enable NASA to continuously Web-stream the "Earth music" of the aurora and other natural phenomena. The project is part of a new NASA education initiative designed to excite students about space research and interest them in pursuing careers in math, engineering and the sciences. A pilot program will start during the fall 2005 school term.
Photo: NASA/MSFC


The receiver will help NASA and students around the nation study the eerie "music" of planet Earth -- radio waves emitted by lightning strikes and other natural phenomena, which VLF receivers deliver as a weirdly beautiful chorus.

VLF receiver systems are simple gadgets, little more than an antenna and an audio amplifier, which translate radio waves -- inaudible to humans -- into acoustic oscillations we can hear. In 1990, space scientist Bill Taylor of NASA's Goddard Space Center in Greenbelt, Md., and Bill Pine, an enterprising science teacher at Chaffey High School in Ontario, Calif., founded the Interactive NASA Space Physics Ionosphere Radio Experiments program, or INSPIRE, which uses these receivers to bring the excitement of studying very-low-frequency radio waves into the classroom.

INSPIRE, a non-profit education program managed at the Goddard Center, encourages students to build and activate VLF receiver systems and develop their own research projects. To date, more than 1,500 receivers have been built at elementary schools and high schools across North America. But none as far north as North Pole, Alaska.

Enter Szuberla, who holds a doctorate in physics, and his quartet of field researchers, 16-year-olds Kit Dawson and Matt Welch and 17-year-olds Matt Keller and Nicolas Leland -- all juniors studying calculus and advanced computer programming.

jpg North Pole students

Student engineers at North Pole High School in North Pole, Alaska, run diagnostic tests on a radio receiver they installed on their school roof in January. Their work will enable NASA scientists at the National Space Science and Technology Center in Huntsville, Ala., to stream audible "Earth music" emitted by the aurora borealis and other natural phenomena across the Internet. Lightning strikes, the aurora and other atmospheric activity emits strong radio waves that can be translated into audible sound when channeled through very-low-frequency receivers. The project is part of a new NASA education initiative designed to excite students about space research and interest them in pursuing careers in math, engineering and the sciences. A pilot program will start during the fall 2005 school term.
(Photo courtesy of Dr. Curt Szuberla)

Szuberla, in consultation with NASA researchers Jim Spann, Mitzi Adams and Dennis Gallagher of the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., recognized a unique opportunity to use the INSPIRE concept in a new way -- bringing the hunt for ghostly Earth music to a whole new generation of students. Earth's protective magnetic field is familiar to most people, but perhaps less well known is the way it expands around the planet's equator and converges at the North and South Poles. "Space weather" -- activity on the Sun such as solar flares and coronal mass ejections, which can change the interplanetary magnetic field and cause dazzling auroral light displays and other disturbances in Earth's own magnetic field -- make the polar regions more favorable sites for VLF systems to pick up natural Earth sounds.

At the "top" of the world, Szuberla's team also will record the low-frequency music of another natural phenomenon -- the aurora borealis -- and stream it via the Internet to the entire INSPIRE community, and to classrooms and Web users worldwide.

For Szuberla's students, that meant finding an ideal site for the VLF system and building the equipment. Wary of uncertain local terrain that could block or muffle radio waves -- and equally wary of bears -- the team settled on the school roof. To construct the VLF system itself, they traveled to the University of Alaska in nearby Fairbanks to learn how to solder transistors and other miniature components to build the receiver.

That hands-on experience was eye-opening. "I like the fact that when you're done, you're holding something that does a job it couldn't do before," Leland said.

"Assembling the receiver really helped me understand some of the work in our classes," Keller said. "It definitely reinforced my interest in working with computers."

Szuberla enjoys their enthusiasm. "Right now, they're primarily interested in what goes into the box," he said. "In the spring, they'll learn what comes out of it."

It may not take that long to pique their interest. During their initial equipment tests, Szuberla's students quickly became fascinated by the bursts of "sferics," "tweeks" and "whistlers" -- nicknames for lightning-spawned radio waves translated by the VLF system into audible scratches, chirps and squeals. The team will test their apparatus during the spring term, sending audio to Spann and his colleagues at the Marshall Center for verification of a clean signal.

In the fall of 2005, the Marshall Center's Space Science branch at the National Space Science and Technology Center in Huntsville will initiate a Web-based "Earthsounds Scavenger Hunt" program. The three-year education initiative, based on INSPIRE and made possible by a grant in 2004 from NASA's Science Mission Directorate, will challenge students nationwide to use VLFs to "hunt" for natural Earthsounds -- sparking their interest in science and space.

During the 2005-2006 school year, NASA and North Pole High School will stream real-time audio via the Internet. Schools around the country will be invited to join a pilot program to fine-tune the project, but the site will be accessible for all interested users. NASA will open the "Scavenger Hunt" program to high schools nationwide in 2006.

 

On the Web:

To learn more about the INSPIRE program and how to build a VLF receiver, visit:
http://image.gsfc.nasa.gov/poetry/inspire/

This story is courtesy of NASA. Steve Roy is with the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

 

 

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