Kristen Weaver 9 Years Ago Great to hear about perseverance in the face of challenges, and good use of creative thinking and problem solving! 0 Reply as... Cancel
Virgil M Lorenzo 9 Years Ago Medford Middle School SMAPI voted five stars for doing what you did against all odds. The field manual does not define a sample can. Nor does it explain why you need to make a hole on its bottom, nor why you need to pound the can into the ground rather than dig with a trowel to 5 cm deep and put the sample in the can. I have dented so many cans trying that especially since the SMAP manual on the NASA website says that the sample should come from undisturbed earth, ruling out cultivated and irrigated areas. Where I am, you'll hit rocks 95% of the time if the field is not cultivated. And rocks have to be removed from the sample. So it is best to use a trowel. SMAP lost its active part from the malfunction of the amplifier and join me in suggesting to Brian that we can simplify our support for the SMAP mission through gravimetric measurements only, given that one gram of water is one cubic centimeter. The difference due to temperature is negligible. For this simplified support we need a new data entry form, one that guides you to a definition of "dry." The form shall call for three weight measurements, one after 8 hours in 105°C or 220°F oven; the next, after 4 hours; and the third time, if needed, after 2 hours. I use an old toaster/oven that allows me those settings. All you want is to boil that water out without changing the chemistry of the soil. Depending how wet the sample is, the first drying could be longer or shorter. If the weight does not change at the 2nd drying by more than .5 grams, the sample is dry and you do not need the third drying. Until Brian gets a new data entry form, just record your measurements in a journal, noting date and time the sample was taken. If you have a team with four or five members, you can take turns getting a soil sample every day, weigh it (soil and container) immediately each time and wait till you all have your samples. Then dry all of them at the same time on a weekend. From the difference in water moisture in each daily sample, your team can get an idea of the rate of evaporation of the soil moisture in your sample area. This data you can pass on to a gardener. It might help him adjust his sprinkling needs. When you have data for a year, you can graph the rate of evaporation for each month, again something you can present to farmers. Now connect your study of soil moisture with one day having to do with Martian soil. You’ll be the experts when that time comes and its not that far off.Last July, a group of GLOBE students, their parents, some GLOBE trainers from Africa and Japan went to tour Space X in Hawthorne, CA. Elon Musk’s office was upstairs and we could tour only the ground floor but we have seen and heard enough of him on You Tube to bother him. He is busy with plans to get to Mars in 10 to 15 years. Check out Space X website, especially in the Spring. The Mars Colonial Transport will be out by then in concept form. While you are on the website, check out Space X internship program. Think of Middle School and High School as time to build a portfolio that would get you that internship. As soon as you get admitted to a 4-year college, send out an application form for this internship. And do it every summer until you get selected. That could be your ticket to a good job. And to Mars! 0 Reply as... Cancel
(You) 8 Years Ago [...] We are just about one month into the El Niño Field Campaign and we have many schools that have gone above and beyond expectations. Teacher, Jeff Bouwman, at Shumate Middle School in Michigan, has... [...] Read More 0 Reply as... Cancel