The rocket, Aftershock II, reached a height of over 470,000 feet, which is nearly the legal limit for amateur rocket launches ...
We’re just college students who have homework and dishes and groceries to do, and we just sent a rocket to space. We broke ...
The USC Rocket Propulsion Lab recently broke the record for the international altitude record – reaching further into space ...
The previous record-holder was a rocket designed and built by the Civilian Space Exploration Team, which launched in 2014 to ...
What's next: These designs build on the USC Rocket Propulsion Lab’s nearly 20 years of experience building rockets to launch ...
Engineering students at the University of Southern California (USC) have dramatically surpassed a 20-year-old world record ...
Aftershock II, a new rocket built by students at the University of Southern California, recently broke a number of ...
Students with the USC Rocket Propulsion Laboratory club launched their self-built Aftershock II rocket from Nevada’s remote Black Rock Desert on Oct. 20 and shattered the previous record of 73 ...
Dangerous to Allied bombers as well as the ground crews that maintained it and the pilots that flew it, the tiny Me 163 had ...
Students at the University of Southern California’s Rocket Propulsion Lab (USCRPL) designed and built the rocket named ...
The "Aftershock II" soared further into space than any non-governmental and non-commercial group has ever flown before.
The group's Aftershock II rocket reached an altitude of 470,400 feet last month.