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When

Tuesday, October 1, 2019 from 4:00 PM to 8:00 PM PDT
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4PM-6PM:
  • RPL (Rocket Propulsion Laboratory) and LPL (Liquid Propulsion Laboratory) Student Displays. (Buffet food and non-alcoholic drinks will be provided.)
6PM-7PM
  • View Hardware exhibits and posters
  • Networking
7PM-8PM:
  • AIAA LA-LV Event Introduction
  • Speech by Dean of the Viterbi Engineering School
  • Student Video Presentations on Rocket Launch
  • Speech by Chair of the ASTE Department
  • AIAA LA-LV Presenting the Awards to the USC RPL Team 2019

Where

University of Southern California Main Campus 
University of Southern California Main Campus
3409 S. Figueroa Street
At The Vineyard in the Davidson Hall
Los Angeles, CA 90089
 

 
Driving Directions 

Contact

Events / Program Chair, LA 
American Institute of Aeronautics & Astronautics, Los Angeles - Las Vegas Section 
949-426-8175 
events.aiaalalv@gmail.com

(Event is free for all. Reception/Food buffet is included. You do not need to be a member of AIAA to attend the event. RSVP is required to get headcount. Volunteers are needed for future AIAA LA-LV events.To Volunteer please contact
Dr. Chandrashekhar Sonwane at cgsonwane@gmail.com)
Tuesday, October 1, 2019
AIAA LA-LV Special Awards Banquet to Celebrate Achievement of Undergraduate Students
from
USC Rocket Propulsion Laboratory
(Launch Success on April 21st, 2019)

USC Student Rocketry Groups including RPL and Liquid Propulsion Lab will have hardware exhibits at the event to showcase the hands on work USC student participate in

 

Register Now!                                           (Please enable the Javascript on your Web Browser)

USC RPL Team 2019

The Kármán line is defined as the boundary between Earth’s atmosphere and outer space. While the original definition refers to the altitude at which the atmosphere becomes too thin to contribute enough lift to support aeronautical flight, the Kármán line now is internationally recognized to be located at an altitude of 100 kilometers, or 328,084 feet, above Earth’s average sea level (AMSL). Beginning with the German V-2 rocket, the first rocket to cross that threshold, countries have been shooting for space for over half of the past century. Although private companies have been able to reach space and orbit for a few decades, a collegiate team has never independently designed, built and launched a rocket that went to space and was recovered intact. With that knowledge in mind, the USC Rocket Propulsion Lab was founded in 2005 with the goal of being the first student group to do exactly that. A space race arose from universities around the world, as many took incremental steps closer to reaching the Kármán line. Now, 14 years after RPL was created, the collegiate space race has ended; Traveler IV, the latest spaceshot vehicle from the USC Rocket Propulsion Lab, passed the Kármán line on April 21st, 2019.

Please Join us on Tuesday, October 1, 2019, and celebrate for / honor the USC RPL Team 2019, for their successful launch of their student rocket passing the The Kármán line into Space!

4PM-6PM:
  • RPL (Rocket Propulsion Laboratory) and LPL (Liquid Propulsion Laboratory) Student Displays. (Buffet food and non-alcoholic drinks will be provided.)
6PM-7PM
  • View Hardware exhibits and posters
  • Networking
7PM-8PM:
  • AIAA LA-LV Event Introduction
  • Speech by Dean of the Viterbi Engineering School
  • Student Video Presentations on Rocket Launch
  • Speech by Chair of the ASTE Department
  • AIAA LA-LV Presenting the Awards to the USC RPL Team 2019