Alora Mazarakis, Speed School alumna and NASA engineer
Alora Mazarakis, Speed School alumna and NASA engineer

奥丑别苍听听was a young girl, she didn鈥檛 play with Barbie dolls. Instead, she played with airplane toys and Pilot Mickey Mouse and Flight Attendant Minnie.

鈥淢y dad was a pilot for UPS, and I always had an affinity for space,鈥 said the Speed School alumna. 鈥淲hen I was in elementary school, I told my dad I wanted to go to college at NASA.鈥

She had no idea how that child鈥檚 dream would actually one day come to fruition.

Fly me to the moon

Mazarakis, who graduated from with her bachelor鈥檚 degree in electrical engineering, and a minor in astrophysics in 2019, was part of the team for听听launch on Nov. 15, the first of a series of space missions that aims to return humans to the moon and eventually, send them to Mars.听

The 26-year old, who has been employed by NASA since April 2021, completed her MS in electrical and computer engineering specializing in radio frequency and avionics engineering from Embry Riddle Aeronautical University one month later. She worked as a NASA contractor for two years before her current position as a flight communications and tracking electrical engineer.

鈥淢y job in Artemis I is to be a part of the team that tests, verifies and prepares all the radio frequency and antenna systems for launch readiness, as well as the video systems on the Orion crew module,鈥 Mazarakis said. 鈥淥n launch day, we sit in the firing rooms and say, ‘Go for launch’ on all of the communication systems.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a feeling like no other. It鈥檚 almost like a day that you feel will never come, but when it does, it feels like your first child being born. You鈥檝e put all this work and time and effort into this massive system,鈥 Mazarakis said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e worked with so many other teams and everybody has really given all their blood, sweat and tears into a successful and safe launch.鈥

Mazarakis explained that the name Artemis encompasses all of the missions to the moon that NASA will be executing in the next decade.

鈥淎rtemis I is the first of a couple increasingly complex missions,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e will launch Artemis II, which is going to do an orbital flight. Artemis III will be the one where we plan on putting boots on the moon.鈥

From aspiring engineer to Cape Canaveral 听

Originally from New York City, Mazarakis and her family moved to Shelbyville, Kentucky, when she was a middle-schooler. As a high school senior, Mazarakis visited Speed School friends and saw the course work they were doing.

鈥淚t occurred to me that I really loved the idea of problem solving, critical thinking, thinking and making things,鈥 she said. 鈥淥nce I decided on engineering, I knew it would be Speed School because it鈥檚 the best engineering school around. Everybody knows their engineers go through a much more rigorous curriculum and are much more prepared for the real world.鈥

Mazarakis first majored in bioengineering, but changed gears to pursue aerospace once she joined the River City Rocketry (RCR) team, a student organization dedicated to the hands-on building of rockets. Named Student of the Year in 2019, Mazarakis attributes much of her ability and the jobs she鈥檚 been offered in her field to her foundational experience with Speed School and with RCR.

鈥淩iver City Rocketry wasn鈥檛 just a club, it was a team where they only pick the people who have real passion that鈥檚 palpable, people who are going to be dedicated and spend all their extra time at the engineering garage and really learn how to build rockets,鈥 Mazarakis said.

While a member of RCR, Mazarakis helped her team win the NASA student-launched competition against schools like Purdue, Notre Dame and Vanderbilt.

鈥淭hese are schools that not only have aerospace programs, but the best in the nation,鈥 she said.

The networking opportunities afforded by RCR and organizations like Phi Sigma Rho Sorority for Women in Engineering helped her secure an instrumental co-op rotation with Red Wire Space, sending her down the path to aerospace success.

鈥淭he fact that Speed School has so many alumni who end up at big space companies like NASA, Blue Origin, Gulf Stream Aerospace, SpaceX, is because we weren鈥檛 just sitting in class reading textbooks about aerospace,鈥 Mazarakis said. 鈥淭o be successful, we had to learn it ourselves and just do it. We had the ability to do that through the engineering garage (makerspace) and through mentorship from great professors, but just being able to have the tools was really fantastic.鈥

Mazarakis likened the rigorous academics of Speed School to boot camp, but said the long, tough hours prepared her for her demanding work schedule at NASA.

鈥淵ou build up this mental rigor for work that is really useful,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ometimes at NASA we work around the clock and I sleep under my desk. I really thought that after college, I would be able get a good night鈥檚 sleep. It鈥檚 a good thing that I braced myself early.鈥

The definition of a dream job

鈥淭o say working at NASA is gratifying is an understatement,鈥 said Mazarakis. 鈥淢y whole life I always wanted to work in space, and then at River City Rocketry I realized that I wanted to build rocket ships. But to be here now actually building them, it鈥檚 like I have to pinch myself on the daily.鈥

Mazarakis said a lot of the testing she performs for her job requires her to climb into the rocket鈥檚 crew module to test from inside the rocket.

鈥淥f course, I鈥檓 focusing on my work when I鈥檓 in there but mentally I鈥檓 so excited saying to myself, 鈥業鈥檓 in a rocket, I鈥檓 inside the rocket.鈥欌

What is next for the young NASA engineer?

鈥淚 feel like I just achieved my ultimate dream, my ultimate goal just two years ago, so to me it feels weird to be thinking ahead right now,鈥 she said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just so happy to be here where I am.鈥

What about the idea of Alora Mazarakis, astronaut?听

鈥淚t is a lofty ambition and I think I will apply the next time a spaceflight class opens up,鈥 she said. 鈥淒o I think I鈥檒l get chosen? Probably not, but I would definitely try. If the opportunity arose, I would gladly, gladly accept 鈥 I鈥檒l put it that way.鈥

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