How a Bunch of Students Set a New Rocket Record
Released on 05/18/2017
[Man] On March fourth, a team of students
from the University of Southern California
set a record by sending this rocket
144,000 feet up into the air.
That means Fathom Two reached
the highest altitude ever,
for a rocket entirely designed
and built by students.
But the team behind it has even higher aspirations.
We get there in the early morning,
everyone's kind of like groggy and tired
with this underlying excitement
of oh my God, we're gonna launch a rocket.
Usually the first day that we get there
we kinda do a little set up,
we set up our avionics systems,
we set up our launch tower,
and then we kinda just run through
what the day of the launch will look like,
getting the rocket out to the tower,
raising it up.
[Man] The 17-year-old members
of USC's Rocket Propulsion Lab trekked
to Spaceport America in New Mexico
for the launch. It usually doesn't
become real until the countdown starts,
which is always a really weird phenomenon
just being like, alright, you know,
this is my ninth desert trip, or whatever,
and then I hear 10 and I'm like, shit.
We see it go up, it looks great,
we don't see a parachute,
it's flying beautifully
and all of us are just kinda of like,
like shaking.
[Man] As Fathom Two shot upwards it shattered
the cinder blocks on the launch pad,
it reached four times the speed of sound
as it disappeared from view.
It safely deployed its parachute
and was recovered nearly seven miles
from the launch site. We have to emphasize
a couple things, that we are a student group,
first of all, because there has been
an amateur group that has already gone to space
with a designed and built rocket
but they were a group of retired
aerospace professionals, so, amateur.
It's important for us that we distinguish
that it's student designed and built
because that's what our entire lab is founded on.
We know what we're doing, we're the ones
that are pushing these technologies,
we're the ones that are actively making this
so that when we actually do go to space,
it's that much more impactful.
[Man] This launch smashed results
from other universities around the world
and more than doubled the height
of the team's previous rocket.
Now, if they can do that again next time,
they will be tantalizingly close to
the edge of space at 330,000 feet.
And that's their aim,
with a new, wider, taller rocket.
But that's a mission for next semester.
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