NASA along with space agencies around the world are preparing for the third
annual International Space Apps Challenge, which will be held April 12-13.
Participants will develop mobile applications, software, hardware, data
visualization and platform solutions that could contribute to space exploration
missions and help improve life on Earth.
At the Climate Data Initiative launch at the White House Wednesday, NASA
Chief Scientist Ellen Stofan announced the inclusion of a new challenge focused
on coastal flooding, developed by NASA and NOAA, and based on federal
cross-agency data. The Coastal Inundation in Your Community challenge is one of
four climate-related challenges using data provided by NASA, the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
The challenge encourages entrepreneurs, technologists, and developers to
create and deploy data-driven visualizations and simulations that will help
people understand their exposure to coastal-inundation hazards and other
vulnerabilities.
“Solutions developed through this challenge could have many potential
impacts,” said Stofan. "This includes helping coastal businesses determine
whether they are currently at risk from coastal inundation, and whether they
will be impacted in the future by sea level rise and coastal erosion."
The two-day International Space Apps Challenge will be a “codeathon”-style
event locally hosted at almost 100 locations spanning six continents. More than
200 data sources, including data sets, data services, and tools will be made
available. This event will bring tech-savvy citizens, scientists, entrepreneurs,
educators, and students together to help solve challenges relevant to both space
exploration and social needs.
"The International Space Apps Challenge is one of the U.S. commitments to the
Open Government Partnership to explore new ways that open space data can help
the planet and further space exploration," said Deborah Diaz, deputy chief
information officer at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
This year, more than 40 new challenges will represent NASA mission priorities
and be organized in five themes: Earth Watch, Technology in Space Human
Spaceflight, Robotics, and Asteroids. About half of the challenges are in the
Earth Watch theme, which supports NASA's focus on Earth science in 2014.
For the first time in more than a decade, five NASA Earth science missions
are being launched into space in the same year, opening new and improved remote
eyes to monitor our changing planet. The agency shares this unique knowledge
with the global community and works with institutions in the United States and
around the world that contribute to understanding and protecting our home
planet.
For more information about NASA's Earth science activities in 2014,
visit:
For more information about the Coastal Inundation In Your Community
challenge,
visit:
For a full list of challenges and for more information about International
Space Apps Challenge,
visit:
For information about NASA's programs and missions,
visit:
NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
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