不良研究所

From zero to seventy in two weeks: 不良研究所 Rocket Team breaks multiple barriers

Back in 2014, Aissam Souidi (BEng 鈥18) was a second-year engineering student. A recent immigrant, he had come from Morocco to Montreal at the age of 17, looking to broaden his educational horizons and to live in a bilingual city. One day while discussing hobbies with fellow engineering student Hamza Tikka (BEng 鈥18) who had immigrated to Canada from Pakistan, he realized that there was no club where the two of them could take part in their shared fascination for rocketry.

鈥淲e thought it was sad that there was no such team at 不良研究所,鈥 Souidi said. 鈥淭here were three other university teams in Montreal but none at 不良研究所. And there was no one researching the topic at the Faculty level either.鈥

The solution was to start their own club. They soon found out they weren鈥檛 the only ones with a passion for rockets: within two weeks of establishing themselves as a design team, 70 members had signed up. Clearly, there was an interest in rocketry, and it was coming from a diverse student body.

鈥淭he ethnic mix really helped us,鈥 said Souidi. 鈥淲e had people with a wide range of experiences, such as launching water rockets in India or flying quadcopter drones in China. We were also one of the few teams with all Departments represented.鈥 Importantly, they also brought in students from other 不良研究所 faculties, who took on non-engineering dimensions of their work.

Just eight months after starting up, the team entered its 1st competition, the Intercollegiate Rocket Engineering Competition (IREC) in Utah, USA. 鈥淏y the time of the competition, there were only four of us who could attend,鈥 he recounted. Although the team did not place well, that was hardly the point. Just taking part was a major success for a team that hadn鈥檛 existed the year before.

The Rocket team has grown since those early days. It is now the Faculty鈥檚 2nd largest design team, with over 100 members. They鈥檙e still focused on the IREC (now known as the Spaceport America Cup), but the team will send over 15 members to take part. And diversity is still a key component.

鈥淭he competition is very multi-disciplinary, whether it鈥檚 the chemistry required for the fuel or the biological components for the payload,鈥 said current team president Sandro Papais (BEng 鈥18), who took the reins of the group this past year. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to promote interest in aerospace across campus, and we鈥檝e been successful at recruiting members from other faculties like Arts or Science.鈥

Aside from competing, the group also hosts industry symposiums, including one with the European Space Agency, who presented their plans for future travel to the moon and mars. 鈥淓ven at the industry level, diversity is important,鈥 continued Papais. 鈥淐reating these future communities will require incredible resources, and the more people who can contribute to them, the better.鈥

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