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From an Undergraduate Research Lab to NASA

SLU Aerospace Engineering Student Lindsey Jasper

老司机福利网 student Lindsey Jasper can pinpoint the exact moment she became fascinated by space. She was in elementary school when her dad took her to see an IMAX show about NASA and the space program.

Lindsey Jasper

鈥淭hey cut to the international space station, and the astronauts are eating M&M鈥檚, swimming in the gravity-less environment,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥楾hat is so cool; that is exactly what I want to do with my life.鈥欌

A decade later, Jasper has made significant strides toward achieving that goal. Currently a sophomore aerospace engineering student at SLU鈥檚 Parks College of Engineering, Aviation and Technology, the Boston native is the communications team lead in the Space Systems Research Lab. There, she is helping design an unmanned autonomous satellite 鈥 called Copper-2 鈥 that is headed to space later this year.

In addition to her work in the lab, Jasper assists Michael Swartwout, Ph.D., director of the Space Systems lab and chair of SLU鈥檚 mechanical and aerospace program, with research into long-term propulsion systems and orbital mechanics for future near-earth prospecting satellites.

Those opportunities, along with an internship at St. Louis-area industrial automation firm Neff Power, have helped the 19-year-old land a job she couldn鈥檛 be more excited about: For the next two summers, she鈥檒l work at NASA in Ohio as a systems engineer in its ground-based systems and aeronautics division.

'Real Research'

After only three semesters at SLU, Jasper is already blown away by the research opportunities available to her as an undergraduate student. She recalled an eye-opening moment when a Google search related to the subject of her research efforts turned up virtually empty.

鈥淚 realized at that moment that I was doing real research. No one else has done this before,鈥 she said.

Whether or not her current research leads to any scientific breakthroughs, Jasper is thrilled to be part of the process. 鈥淏eing able to say that I was a part of something that furthered science as a whole is so cool,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd being able to do that so young is not only what鈥檚 great about SLU, but what鈥檚 great about aerospace engineering.鈥

Jasper also has been able to make valuable contributions in the Space Systems lab. Earlier this year, a problem with Copper-2鈥檚 battery system threatened to ground the entire mission, and she played an instrumental role in getting the project back on track.

鈥淎s a freshman 鈥 and one of only two workers in the lab over the summer 鈥 Lindsey would stay late and run tests, analyze data and help diagnose the problem,鈥 said Nicholas Mercadante, senior aerospace student and student program manager of the Space Systems lab.

That type of practical, hands-on learning is an important aspect of SLU鈥檚 undergraduate engineering programs. According to Swartwout, first- and second-year students find themselves in key leadership positions, rather than holding a clipboard while seniors run the tests and do the design work.

鈥淪tudents who can shoulder that kind of responsibility will find that they are given that kind of responsibility, regardless of their year in school,鈥 he added. 鈥淟indsey is one of those students.鈥

Women Widen the Path for Girls in Science

While aerospace engineering has traditionally been a male-dominated profession, Jasper is optimistic about growing numbers of girls and women being attracted to the field.

鈥淭he more women role models that exist in engineering, the more girls who will be attracted to it. Because when you see yourself in someone with a job that excites you

鈥 and who鈥檚 been successful 鈥 it鈥檚 much easier to make the jump to 鈥極h, I could do that; I would like a career like that.鈥欌

Asked if she鈥檚 excited about the potential of being that role model for the next generation of girls, Jasper recalled being invited to speak to a group of middle school students about the path that led her to aerospace engineering and the work she鈥檚 doing today.

鈥淚t was the first time I realized: Wow, people actually look at me and see someone they want to be like,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd for me, that鈥檚 a huge honor, a huge privilege.鈥

Like Jasper, Swartwout is hopeful that girls will be encouraged as they look to engineering careers, and especially to SLU.

鈥淥ne of the things that makes me proud of our students and this lab,鈥 Swartwout said, 鈥渋s that having women in positions of management authority and technical decision-making is normal. There is nothing unusual, within this lab, in having a woman run a team, or even the entire program.鈥

SLU鈥檚 Holistic Approach to Engineering Education

Jasper鈥檚 position as Space Systems Research Lab communications team lead and the systems engineer role she鈥檒l play at NASA both position her as liaison between groups of engineers 鈥 mechanical, computer, aerospace 鈥 who, at times, don鈥檛 speak the same language.

Systems engineers, Jasper said, facilitate communication between a project鈥檚 various teams, keeping everyone on the same page, so they can operate as a cohesive unit.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a big-picture role 鈥 [being] the person who steps back to say, 鈥榠s this all working together,鈥 and if it鈥檚 not, 鈥榳hy isn鈥檛 it working together?鈥欌

Jasper鈥檚 natural tendency to look at the big picture is one of the reasons she values SLU鈥檚 holistic approach to aerospace engineering education, where theory, math and real-world experience are used in concert with one another.

鈥淪o much of engineering education is looking at ideal situations 鈥 like physics problems that have no friction,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 happen in the real world. Things don鈥檛 work like they do in perfect textbook environments. So by having all this hands-on experience, you end up being someone who can look at a real-world problem and effectively solve it by using the theory you know from the classroom and real-life practice.鈥

Jasper said she couldn鈥檛 be happier with her decision to come to SLU.

鈥淭he experience and opportunities at the University have been great,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 would not be where I am today without SLU.鈥