
On March 28, 80 college students filed into Colorado State University's (CSU) Nancy Richardson Design Center to receive pizza and a challenge: design an intelligent system capable of traversing rugged terrain to provide aid in emergency scenarios.
They had 24 hours to complete this mission.
Co-led by CSU, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service, and NASA, the Spring 2025 CSU Hackathon forged a symbiotic relationship between federal agencies looking for novel AI solutions and innovative students hungry for a challenge.
"One of the goals of the Career Center is to create opportunities for relationship building," said Mika Dalton, CSU's career center employer relations coordinator. "Events like these really help students connect with industry and identify different career pathways to expand their understanding of where their education could lead them after graduation."
In teams of four, students chose between two technical prompts grounded in real-world data. The USDA Forest Service posed the "Uncharted Challenge," asking teams to develop an autonomous mapping system for uncharted National Forest System roads using high-resolution satellite imagery. In the "Rover Challenge" posed by NASA, students were asked to design an algorithm that could autonomously guide a rover across rough terrain to reach an injured firefighter.
Over the next 24 hours, students analyzed lidar and satellite imagery, built algorithms, and tested their models in SageMaker, a development environment hosted by Amazon Web Services (AWS). As they collaborated on their solutions, students also helped NASA evaluate SageMaker's potential for agency adoption.
The students' work delivered tangible value to both agencies, demonstrating novel approaches to real operational challenges like wildfire response, terrain mapping, and emergency search and rescue.