Sisters Rebecca and Kimberly Yeung set a lofty goal last year. The girls, from Seattle, Washington, wanted to launch a balloon to the edge of space. The cargo: scientific sensors, a LEGO® figure of R2-D2, and a photo of Loki, their cat.
Rebecca, 11, and Kimberly, 9, named their craft the Loki LEGO Launcher. They set three criteria, or standards, for success. They wanted to film the blackness of space. They hoped to measure how high the craft flew. Most importantly, they wanted to find the launcher once it fell to Earth.
Rebecca and Kimberly Yeung are sisters. They live in Seattle, Washington. Last year, they decided to do something big. They wanted to launch a balloon to the edge of space. It carried scientific tools, a LEGO® figure of R2-D2, and a photo of their cat Loki.
Rebecca is 11 and Kimberly is 9. They named their project the Loki LEGO Launcher. They set three criteria (cry-TEE-ree-uh). Meeting these goals would make their project a success.
Space is dark. The girls wanted to film this blackness. They also wanted to know how high the launcher flew. Their third goal was to find the launcher after it fell to Earth.