Meet DPS RK Puram students who won hearts at NASA competition with their unique 'Space Settlement Design Competition'

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Every year, the National Space Society works with the NASA Ames Research Center to conduct a student competition in which teams from around the world design future orbital space settlements that will house thousands of people.
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This year the contest received more than 1,500 submissions from an estimated 6,000 students. The Grand Prize for the 2017 Space Settlement Contest went to a small team of two students (grade 10), Shashwat Goel and Ankita Phulia from New Delhi, India.

Their winning design Anastasi is an underwater settlement. It is a low cost simulation of artificial habitats in outer space. It will provide insights on the conditions of early orbital space settlements as well as serve as a training facility for the early inhabitants of these. Anastasi will be a profitable venture proving the commercial viability of colonizing unexplored territories. It will be located in the Dead Sea and will have immense benefits for the region as it aims to desalinate enclosed areas of the sea and introduce marine life that could not survive earlier.

The DPS students were mentored by student mentor Aditya Sengupta and teacher Anil Kumar Verma of Delhi Public School RK Puram. One of two grand prize students along with hundreds of other contest-winning students and teachers from the United States and countries across the globe will converge in St. Louis this month for the National Space Society's 36th annual International Space Development Conference to celebrate and engage people in the goal of space settlement. They will present their projects to conference attendees. The event is set for May 24-29 at the St. Louis Union Station Hotel.

"The students attending the ISDC are so passionate and excited to be there to share their ideas and projects. There is so much to learn from them, their cultures, and creative insights," said Lynne F. Zielinski, NSS vice president of public affairs and chair of NSS' education and outreach committee. "We are always dazzled by their insightful and futuristic designs. Their enthusiasm is infectious and gives us all hope that we will soon be living and working in space ourselves. These students are the ones to take us there."

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Winning students Aditya Sengupta and Ankita Phulia had this to say, "Our school (Delhi Public School R.K.Puram, India) has a club called the Aerospace Society (Aeross) that has been participating in the NASA Ames Contest since 2013. That's how we got to know about the contest. We were very nervous about sending an unconventional entry which was not an 'orbital settlement in space' and it was unbelievable when we got to know that we had won the grand prize. Winning the prize has strengthened our belief in our work and we will further improve the concept as we hope that it becomes a reality one day and serves as an important step in the path to space colonization."

Teacher In-charge Mr. Anil Kumar Verma said,"The NASA Ames Contest has not only developed an interest towards aerospace, it has motivated students to come up with creative concepts and has helped build a temperament towards research at an early age," said Teacher-In-Charge Anil Kumar Verma. "It provides the students a great platform to gain knowledge and getting their work recognized by NASA encourages them to work hard," he said.

Meanwhile, student mentor Aditya Sengupta said,"This has been my third year in the competition and it feels great that a team I mentored has won the Grand Prize," said Aditya Sengupta, the student mentor for the project. "I came up with the idea of how the oceans were quite similar to space and proposed this to Shashwat and Ankita as a side-research project. It was initially not intended to be submitted to the NASA Ames Contest but because the research came out quite well, they decided to submit it to Ames even though it was a 'Space Settlement Design Competition.' It was very exciting to see the students working so hard on a very abstract and challenging concept as both were well-versed with Space Settlement Design but Underwater Settlement Design forced them to step out of their comfort zone," he said.
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