![]() ![]() When one-half of the Orion Capsule Access platform was found to be two inches lower, she performed a laser scan and produced a 3D visualization. Liu’s most memorable excursion was to the Vehicle Assembly Building, in which the Boeing team came to laser-scan a sagging high bay platform. Her project extended to multiple agencies and various research groups at the Kennedy Space Center. She has modeled new plant growth systems and launched software and In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU) machinery. Liu works with both teams to 3D model, simulate, and communicate new technology that is being developed for the Artemis Program. If she is not found in the lab, then she was supporting the team in capturing 3D laser scans of a building, launchpad, or observing technology that is to be modeled in a research lab. In Liu’s day-to-day as an intern, she was usually in the lab, creating a 3D model or simulation of an environment or piece of technology at the Kennedy Space Center. The Boeing DV Lab leverages 3D scanning, simulations, and modeling to ensure the efficiency and safety of NASA ground operations. Liu also worked with the Boeing Design Visualization (DV) Lab which specializes in 3D laser scans to support ground operations. The SBIR Program funds small businesses and universities to create new NASA technologies. SBIR Program and Boeing DV LabĪs a former Technology Design Visualization NASA intern, Liu worked with NASA’s Small Business Innovation and Research (SBIR) Program. “I am overjoyed to be able to witness the many innovations that are helping to bring us back to the Moon,” Liu said. She is also a former Technology Design Visualization NASA intern at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Yuhan Liu, a sophomore at the University of Pennsylvania, is double majoring in Digital Media Design and Entrepreneurship. It is National STEM Day! Today is the day that is dedicated to encouraging everyone to explore their interests in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Because it reflects who you’re and you might just never know who is seeing it.Yuhan Liu is standing on the roof of the Kennedy Space Center in Florida with her hard hat on. Anyways it’s still advisable to mind the kind of things you put out on your page. “She didn’t go to NASA page to type this. To be fair to her… It was her page,” user Norbert Ifeanyi contended. “Damn… Don’t let over excitement ruin your life,” Kriss Ray wrote. The exchange sparked mixed reactions from other Twitter users. “I have also talked to the folks that had to do with her internship and made absolutely certain that there will be no black mark on her record. “After talking to her and looking at her resume, I am certain she deserves a position in the aerospace industry and I’m doing all I can to secure her one that will be better than she lost,” he added. Naomi reached out with “an unnecessary apology” which Hickam returned with his own, he wrote. “As it turned out, it was due to the NASA hashtag her friends used that called the agency’s attention to it long after my comments were gone.” “This I had nothing to do with nor could I since I do not hire and fire at the agency or have any say on employment whatsoever,” he wrote. He later learned that NASA had rescinded its internship offer to Naomi. ![]() “Soon, her friends took umbrage and said a lot of unkind things but long after I was gone as I immediately deleted my comments and blocked all concerned.” “However, when I saw NASA and the word used together, it occurred to me that this young person might get in trouble if NASA saw it so I tweeted to her one word: ‘Language’ and intended to leave it at that,” he wrote. ![]() In a since-deleted blog post that is still available on Google archives, Hickam, a Vietnam vet, wrote that it wasn’t the F-word alone that bugged him. He replied: “And I am on the National Space Council that oversees NASA.” She clearly didn’t heed his advice - shooting back, “Suck my d–… I’m working at NASA.” Responding to the tweet, Homer Hickam - the ex- NASA engineer who is renowned for his memoir “Rocket Boys,” which was adapted into the 1999 drama “October Sky” featuring Jake Gyllenhaal - replied with a single word: “Language.” “EVERYONE SHUT THE F–K UP,” she wrote in all caps in the since-deleted tweet that has been captured in reposted screenshots. A would-be NASA intern lost her dream job before it even started - because of a vulgar tweet she unwittingly blasted off at a former agency engineer who’s a member of the National Space Council.Ī woman only identified by her Twitter handle, went on Twitter earlier this week to crow that she had been offered an internship with the national space agency. ![]()
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