And the Winners Are . . .

See who took home top honors in the world’s largest global hackathon.
Image

The judges have spoken, and seven projects were selected from more than 2,300 submissions as Global Winners in the 2020 NASA International Space Apps Challenge.

Global Awards were given in six areas:

  1. Best Use of Data: Monsoon Overflow (Vallabh Vidhya Nagar, Anand, India)
  2. Best Mission Concept: Loud and Clear (Perth, Western Australia)
  3. Galactic Impact: Project L.L.O.C.U.S.T. (Locust Location, Obliteration, and Coordination Using Satellites and Tidings) (Universal Event)
  4. Best Use of Science: Aspire (Tilangana, India)
  5. Best Use of Technology: FireWay (Dnipro, Ukraine)
  6. Most Inspirational (Two Winners): A.I. Itruistics (Universal Event); Team Twilight (Girls Club NYC, U.S.A.)

The 2020 Space Apps Challenge was a collaboration between NASA, ESA (European Space Agency), the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), the Centre National D’Etudes Spatiales (CNES, the French Space Agency), and the Canadian Space Agency (CSA). Along with data openly available through NASA’s Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS), participants were encouraged to integrate data from Space Apps partner agencies.

Image
The Galactic Impact Global Winner Project L.L.O.C.U.S.T. team developed a machine learning model trained on wind, humidity, surface temperatures, and vegetation index sensor data from NASA’s Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) and Terra (MODIS instrument, ASTER instrument) satellites. The final product is shown as a website map that helps detect and assess current risk levels and forecast locust invasions. Project L.L.O.C.U.S.T. was one of 193 submissions in the Automated Detection of Hazards challenge in the Inform category.

 

The goal of the Space Apps Challenge is for teams to create open source solutions to address challenges around a specific theme over an intense 48-hour sprint. From October 2 to 4, more than 3,800 teams created solutions around the theme Take Action. The global pandemic presented challenges to conducting the 2020 International Space Apps Challenge, but the more than 26,000 registered participants were up to the task.

From local event venues including Florianapolis, Brazil; Kathmandu, Nepal; Almaty, Kazakhstan; and Huntsville, Alabama, virtual teams created solutions to 23 challenges addressing life on Earth and in space. Participants who were not near a local venue could participate in the Universal Event.

Challenges were grouped into six categories: Observe, Inform, Sustain, Create, Confront, Connect. A seventh category, Invent Your Own Challenge, allowed participants the freedom to develop their own unique solution outside of the formal categories, but was not eligible for global judging.

Global Winners receive an invitation to present their projects to NASA, ESA, JAXA, CNES, and CSA personnel. If travel is deemed safe, the winners also will be invited to visit a NASA site with the Space Apps Global Organizing Team to view a spacecraft launch.

In addition, the project Zonda Incorporated from Mendoza, Argentina, was invited by ESA to up-scale their project ideas using the Euro Data Cube environment. This separate award provides access to NASA, ESA/Copernicus, JAXA, CNES, and CSA data in the Euro Data Cube with a one-year Euro Data Cube Enterprise license provided by ESA along with free processing resources.

The goals of the 2020 NASA International Space Apps Challenge were to:

  • Inspire collaboration, creativity, and critical thinking;
  • Foster interest in Earth and space science and exploration;
  • Raise awareness of NASA, ESA, JAXA, CNES, and CSA data; and
  • Encourage the growth and diversity of the next generation of scientists, technologists, designers, engineers, and artists.

Space Apps is a NASA-led initiative organized in collaboration with Booz Allen Hamilton, Mindgrub, SecondMuse, and NASA's Open Innovation Applied Sciences Program.

Mark your calendars – the 2021 NASA International Space Apps Challenge is scheduled for October 2 to 3. Details will be available later this year on NASA's Space Apps Challenge website or you can sign up to receive updates and notifications.