Difference between revisions of "Stanford Student Space Initiative (SSI)"

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The Stanford Space Initiative (SSI) is a completely student-run organization founded in 2013 with the mission of giving future leaders of the space industry the hands-on experience and broader insight they need to realize the next era of space development.
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{{teams-table}}
  
SSI is the largest project-based group on campus. We’re the gathering place for people who want to act on their interests in space. Since 2013, we’ve flown a zero gravity experiment with NASA, built multiple CubeSats, inspired 60 teams in 20 countries to launch high altitude balloons, certified 25 students for high powered rocketry, hosted over 100 speakers at talks and conferences, been featured in media like Popular Science, and helped our members intern and work at top aerospace companies.
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The Stanford Student Space Initiative (SSI) is a completely student-run organization founded in 2013 with the mission of giving future leaders of the space industry the hands-on experience and broader insight they need to realize the next era of space development.
  
Over the next year, our teams will send the first university-built rocket to space, launch two satellites, send a high altitude balloon across the country, develop a space-based optical communications system, teach a space policy class, organize speaker events and workshops with industry leaders, and host our second annual conference.
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SSI is the largest project-based group on campus. We’re the gathering place for people who want to act on their interests in space. Since 2013, we’ve flown a zero gravity experiment with NASA, helped build multiple CubeSats, inspired 60 teams in 20 countries to launch high altitude balloons, certified over 30 students for high powered rocketry, hosted over 100 speakers at talks and conferences, been featured in media like Popular Science, and helped our members intern and work at top aerospace companies and organizations.
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Over the next year, our teams will launch a suite of [[:Category:Rockets | rockets]] designed to test novel rocketry technologies and defend our win at last year's [[Intercollegiate Rocketry Engineering Competition]], finish and launch the first [[:Category:Satellites | satellite]] of our own, continue to send [[:Category:High Altitude Balloons | high altitude balloons]] across the country and beyond, develop the first in-space [[:Category:Biology | DNA synthesizer]], teach the third edition of our [[AA 47SI: Why Go to Space?|space policy class]], and organize speaker events and workshops with industry leaders.
  
 
We invite you to join us.
 
We invite you to join us.
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[[Category:Stanford Space Initiative| ]]

Latest revision as of 08:13, 8 July 2018

SSI Teams
Rockets
RocketsIcon.png
Satellites
SatelliteIcon.png
Balloons
BalloonIcon.png
Operations
OperationsIcon.png
Policy
PolicyIcon.png
Biology
BiologyIcon.png
Mars
MarsIcon.png

The Stanford Student Space Initiative (SSI) is a completely student-run organization founded in 2013 with the mission of giving future leaders of the space industry the hands-on experience and broader insight they need to realize the next era of space development.

SSI is the largest project-based group on campus. We’re the gathering place for people who want to act on their interests in space. Since 2013, we’ve flown a zero gravity experiment with NASA, helped build multiple CubeSats, inspired 60 teams in 20 countries to launch high altitude balloons, certified over 30 students for high powered rocketry, hosted over 100 speakers at talks and conferences, been featured in media like Popular Science, and helped our members intern and work at top aerospace companies and organizations.

Over the next year, our teams will launch a suite of rockets designed to test novel rocketry technologies and defend our win at last year's Intercollegiate Rocketry Engineering Competition, finish and launch the first satellite of our own, continue to send high altitude balloons across the country and beyond, develop the first in-space DNA synthesizer, teach the third edition of our space policy class, and organize speaker events and workshops with industry leaders.

We invite you to join us.