Save the date…June 8, 2010
In celebration of our second year
hosting a NASA Centennial Challenge, WPI is once again transforming our campus
into a family-friendly festival of science and technology. Join us at
TouchTomorrow 2013 on Saturday June 8th, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., for an
out-of-this-world experience filled with interactive exhibits, learning, games,
and fun.
Continuing
a stellar tradition
Last summer over 7,000 people
attended TouchTomorrow 2012 to help WPI celebrate our historic achievement of
being the first university to host a NASA Centennial Challenge. The event was
truly a day to remember
as participants of all ages engaged in hands-on learning and exploration.
We’re working hard to make sure that
this year’s festival continues the tradition and brings guests even more
excitement and education around science, technology, engineering, and math.
Here’s
a snapshot of what you can expect:
Explore
Space, Robots, and More
- Meet Captain Stephen G. Bowen,
a NASA astronaut from Massachusetts who has completed three
spaceflights and seven spacewalks
- Check out returning NASA favorites including the Robonaut
Hand, MarcBot, Be a Bot, Mac 3 Suit, and the Starfish
tent
- NASA’s Lunar Quest, a simulated trek across the moon’s surface using
satellite imagery
- Magic Planet,
a dynamic digital exploration of the Earth, other planets, and space
- Lunarscape
floor map
- Rock out to a Robot Band. The band will be on stage a few times during the
festival so be sure to check out the schedule when you get here.
- Make your own slime! Combine a few basic
ingredients to make this unique substance that has qualities of both a
liquid and a solid.
- Play Pop fly, the football game with a
twist. Take a ping pong ball, paint stirrers, a wooden spool, and tape.
Add your foot and ready, set, launch!
- Discover an enlightening and delicious way to explore
numbers with M&M® Math
- Learn about the lifecycle of a star
- Craft your own flying devices at the paper airplane
station
- Design a device to protect a water balloon
brain
- Challenge your peers to see how long you can keep a
specially designed bubble in the air
- Examine soil samples to detect nematodes
(roundworms), and bring home a kit to test your own yard
- Find out why you love, or hate, cilantro. Take part in
this Citizen Science project to explore the genetics of
taste.
Get
your hands on innovative research from WPI
- Meet Archie, a PR2 (personal robot) that is spurring
advances in human-robot collaboration and the use of robots in
manufacturing
- Check out medical robots at the Automation and
Interventional Medicine (AIM) Lab, including a robotic penguin used in
therapy for autistic children, a rehabilitation glove for people
recovering from strokes, and a robotic arm assistance device
- Tour the Assistance Technology Lab, where students and
professors will be demoing research devices created to assist people with
disabilities
- Try out other exciting developments from WPI’s robotics
team, including mobile robots, intelligent autonomous ground vehicles, and
a robot that can mimic human emotion
- Visit the WPI Aerospace Engineering tent to see the
student-designed micro-aircraft that recently won a national competition
- Drop in at the Interactive Media and Game Development
labs to play student-designed video games, watch game trailers and view
student animations.
Engage with local and national exhibitors
Check our exhibits and activities from a variety of
organizations:
- Coastal
Studies for Girls
- The
Discovery Museums
- FIRST Burncoat
Green Reapers robotics team
- iRobot
Corporation
- Maine
Aviation Career Education (ACE) Academy
- Museum of
Science “Super-Cold Science” presentation
- Science
from Scientists
- VEX
Robotics, Inc.
- VEX
Worcester Tech team
This is something great to take the kids to. It will open a window to a great adventure. It may be something they would like to do when they get older. It is nice to see what is going on in the area. Bev.
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