Title: Miscellaneous Notes: This is a bare-bones template
1Miscellaneous NotesThis is a bare-bones
template make it fancier if you wish, but be
sure to address at least the items listed
here.Basically this is the oral version of your
written Revision C (due soon), so start at the
beginning and go all the way through data
analysis and conclusions. The main difference
between this and Revision C is that here you will
have much less text since you can talk through
the issues orally. The graphs, photos, etc. you
include here may well be the same as those you
include in Revision C.Remember this is a 20 to
25-minute oral presentation dont go long, but
do make good use of the time you have.Remember
that your slides are due by my office hour on
Tuesday, Nov. 22 they may well be too large to
send by e-mail (and you will want to look them
over once I have them to ensure they play
properly on my computer), so I recommend you
bring them to me in person during my office hour
that dayNote You may assume that your
audience has seen your previous presentations
which means you are allowed to be very brief with
some slides, like schedules, budgets, etc. Leave
them in, for completeness, but spend you talking
time on new things like the flight experience and
especially the data analysis.
2Team NameFinal Team PresentationConsider
putting an eye-catching photo or graphic here.
- Team Members
- Class and Date
3Mission Overview (maybe just 1 slide)
- What are your (multiple) objectives? (there
may be visitors listening to your presentation,
so dont assume everyone has heard this before
(but do go through it quickly)) - What do you expect to show/prove/disprove?
4Team Management (1 or more slides)
- Draw a graphical Org Chart explaining who was
most responsible for building and testing what
part(s) of the payload as well as who worked on
what parts of the data analysis, project
documentation, oral presentations, etc.
5Design Overview (multiple slides be sure to
have your actual box nearby but dont distract
the audience by playing with it, but make these
slides stand alone use bulleted text, labeled
diagrams, and photographs with captions)
- List of items in the payload
- Discussion/figures/photos of box construction
- Layout of the items in the payload box
- Functional block diagram What is attached to
what (both electrically and mechanically) and
why? - Programming (dont include the actual code
(though that should show up in Revision C as an
Appendix -- just state clearly what it does like
records temperature and pressure data once every
xx minutes ) - Final budgets (cost and mass) be sure to
state final mass or weight
6Payload Pre-flight Testing (multiple
slides)(include both a list of tests that you
ran (and those not run)as well as quantitative
testing results)
- What tests were run and what were the results?
(Be quantitative when possible.) What changes,
if any, were made to the payload based on the
testing? What other things could have been
tested had there been enough time and/or the
right equipment (and why would you test those
things and what would you hope the results would
be)? What, if anything, didnt pass the test(s)
and needed to be repaired or swapped out before
the flight?
7Expected Science Results (multiple slides)
- Restate each experiment you ran as well as
specific comments about the results you expected.
By now you should have actual scientific
references for what you expected. For example,
every team should include plots of pressure and
temperature at various altitudes in the
atmosphere these are not hard to find in the
scientific literature if you look for them. You
get to choose whether to put your expected
results all together (here) or to intersperse
them with your experimental results (presented
later). Make this section as quantitative as
possible not just qualitative statements like
We expect the pressure to go down. but rather
(delivered orally while looking at a graph) As
seen in this plot from (give reference), the
atmospheric pressure is expected to start at
about xx at ground level then fall to yy by the
time we reach zz in altitude. Had we gone higher
still the pressure would have
8Flight Day (multiple slides)
- Include comments and photos from the flight day
itself, both the launch and the chase. Include
comments about the status of the payload box when
it was recovered (as best you know them), as
compared to when it was released Was there any
visible damage inside or outside? Were things
still running? Were there any things that didnt
run at properly and have you figured out why?
etc.
9Science Results (multiple slides)
- Here is where you present your experimental
results. You should probably show altitude vs
time and the ground track of the mission (both
provided by me), but dont dwell on them since
they arent specific to your box. Rather,
concentrate on showing graphs (not tables) of
temperature data, pressure data, radiation data,
etc., either versus time (as it was originally
collected) or (better still) versus altitude, as
determined from the GPS record. You do need to
tie altitude to data at least some place in your
analysis. Include photos you analyzed and
explain what you learned from them. Dont just
say The sky got darker as we got higher try
to quantify all statements and show graphs
(well-labeled!) whenever possible.
10Conclusions/Lessons Learned(multiple slides)
- Give a textual summary of what you learned from
the data about each experiment that worked (and
what you learned from the one(s), if any, that
didnt work as expected). - Make specific comments about what else could be
tried along the lines of the experiment(s) you
did. For example, if you were to modify your
payload and fly it again, what would you change
and why? What other experiments now interest
you? - On a separate slide give some explicit Words
of Wisdom to students who might take this class
in the future about what to do (or not do!). - On a separate slide give thanks explicitly to
people not on your team who helped you.