Avery Walters, a third-year civil engineering student at the University of Virginia, has designed a passively cooled Cambodian farm school, a rapidly deployable shelter for displaced people, created 3-D models of Soviet spacecraft and is now working on a smart HVAC control system that manages indoor air quality and energy consumption as his capstone project.
He can add a John Mather Nobel Scholarship to his list of accomplishments.
Walters, whose studies focus on civil engineering with a concentration on environmental and water resources, will use the funds to network.
鈥淭he John Mather Nobel Scholarship enables me to travel to professional conferences, like the American Geophysical Union meeting this fall in New Orleans, where I can meet faculty and researchers from institutions across the world,鈥 Walters said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a young engineer, so opportunities like this can shape my path quite drastically. Also, seeing that I鈥檓 applying to graduate programs, attending conferences like this lets me get to know some potential advisers.鈥
Established in 2008 by the John and Jane Mather Foundation for Science and the Arts, the John Mather Nobel Scholarship Program is awarded to interns who have demonstrated high academic achievement as well as a strong interest in space and the Goddard Space Flight Center. Recipients will meet with John C. Mather, senior astrophysicist, Goddard fellow and Nobel Prize recipient, as well as other distinguished people.
Walters, from Williamsburg, said receiving the scholarship helps him stand out as an applicant for future work with NASA. Walters has already interned at the Goddard Space Flight Center, where he created 3-D models of Soviet spacecraft.

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