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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - A group of University of Alabama engineering
students recently conducted a series of experiments on combustion
that may one day help decrease Americas dependence on imported
energy sources and the negative environmental impact of combustion.
They also experienced what few people ever will -- weightlessness.
For several days in April, the UA student team known as the Bama
Burners, participated in the 2002 Johnson Space Centers
Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program, in Clear Lake,
Texas. The program provided a unique academic experience for undergraduate
students to propose, design, fabricate and evaluate a reduced-gravity
experiment of their choice. The students experienced a weightless
testing environment by spending several hours aboard a Boeing KC-135A
jet which performed parabolic maneuvers to create reduced-gravity
conditions, taking off from NASAs Johnson Space Center. The
same type of aircraft is used in training astronauts for space travel.
The teams research project was titled APACHE,
for All Purpose Autonomous Combustion of Hydrocarbons Experiment.
According to Dr. John Baker, associate professor of mechanical engineering
and faculty co-advisor of APACHE, the goal of the project was to
develop a better understanding of combustion phenomena in a reduced-gravity
environment. The Burners achieved this by examining the behavior
of laminar diffusion flames using slot burners. A diffusion flame
exists when the fuel and oxidizer are not mixed prior to combustion,
as in a candle flame, and studies of these flames are used to gain
insight into more complex combustion processes, said Baker.
When burning a flame on earth, the hot air rises. Gravity
affects a flame, which can make it hard to understand its behavior.
So by removing gravity, we can better understand how things burn,
explained Baker. This could lead to the development of more
effective technology to help decrease our dependency on the fuels
we use today. Approximately 85 percent of the energy used
in the United States is the result of combustion processes, Baker
added.
The team included mechanical engineering students Stormy Speer of
Northport, Lance Strickland of Homewood, Matthew Green of Jasper,
David Fulmer of Tuscaloosa, Nathan Coburn of Tuscaloosa and Justin
Sheffield of Dothan; aerospace engineering student Ashley Moore
of Frankfort, Ky.; and computer science student Anne Thomas of Hatley,
Miss. They had worked together on the project every day since the
fall of 2001. Speer, Strickland, Moore and Thomas were on the flight
crew, while the others were part of the ground crew and related
outreach activities. Dr. Beth Todd, associate professor of mechanical
engineering and co-advisor of the UA team, traveled with the students
to Houston.
During the flights, the Burners collected data, videotaped the experience,
and also had time left over to enjoy floating in zero
gravity. Speers, the groups leader, described her experience
with weightlessness as, Feeling like I was hanging upside
down. I loved it.
Beginning in fall 2002, the team will provide educational outreach
presentations about the research project, showing a video of their
flight experiments to prospective engineering students at recruitment
events such as Engineering Day at the UA College of Engineering,
and during the Colleges SITE (Student Introduction to Engineering)
summer program. They will also give presentations at Girl Scout
Engineering Day and at K-12 schools in the Tuscaloosa area.
For more information on APACHE, or to request a presentation,
contact Dr. John Baker at 205/348-4997.
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