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First satellite 3-D printed in space thanks to NNU students

Posted at 5:13 PM, Aug 23, 2017
and last updated 2017-08-23 19:13:52-04

History was made on Wednesday thanks to professors and students at Northwest Nazarene University. 

Treasure Valley scientists and engineers saw their hard work come alive as they watched the first satellite to be 3-D printed in space take shape.

Engineering students at NNU were selected by NASAto design and submit plans for a CubeSat to be 3-D printed on the International Space Station. 

The project has been in the works for three years.

"It's kind of bittersweet to see it come to an end after spending so much time on it," Braden Grim, NNU engineering graduate and one of the project's lead designers, said. 

Once printing is complete. the pieces will be snapped together with solar cell and electronics boards by the astronaut crew and deployed directly into orbit. 

"To be able to, in just a short amount of time after launching it, [be able to] check it out on our laptops and be able to see that it's working is a very cool concept, and it'll be an exciting day," Grim said. 

The printing took about six hours, and, for a portion of that time, the space station was orbiting over Idaho and the engineers who made the project possible. 

"Right during the print it flew right over Idaho which is just the icing on the cake," Dr. Steve Park, NNU professor of electrical engineering, said.