Posts Tagged ‘NASA’

NASA to demonstrate super-cool cooling technology – CNET

Saturday, May 28th, 2011

The new cooling device from NASA.

The new cooling device of the future from NASA.

(Credit: NASA)

Ever wondered about the source of that humming sound coming from your computer? It’s most likely the fan that tries to ventilate the internal components. That’s a typical cooling system.

NASA's Jeff Didion (holding the pump) and his EHD-cooling technology developing partners.

Jeff Didion (holding the pump) and his EHD-cooling technology developing partners.

(Credit: NASA)

I am not a rocket scientist, but generally speaking, as electronic components get tinier and more powerful, the amount of heat they generate gets proportionately higher. This is due to the simple fact that there’s just not enough surface for the heat to dissipate quickly enough. That’s why all computers’ processors and high-end video cards come with a heat sink with a fan on top. Take this heat sink away and you’d fry the component in a matter of seconds.

Now bring these little advanced devices into space, where there’s no air or moisture to help conduct the heat, and you’ll have an even bigger challenge. And that’s exactly what NASA has been facing.

According to NASA’s Jeff Didion, a thermal engineer at the Goddard Space Flight Center, in the world of electronics, thermal control is always one of the limiting factors. He has been collaborating with Jamal Seyed-Yagoobi, a professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, to partner with the U.S. Air Force and National Renewable Energy Laboratory to find ways to push the envelope of thermal-control barriers.

The result is the new electrohydrodynamic (EHD)-based thermal control technology, unveiled yesterday, that promises to make it easier and more efficient to remove heat from small spaces. This solution is meant to address a particular challenge for engineers building advanced space instruments and microprocessors that could fail if the heat they generate is not removed.

The prototype of the new thermal control technology is a tiny pump, about the size of a little finger, which, apart from the cooling function, is designed to withstand the extreme launch loads as a rocket lifts off and hurtles toward space. The pump will be demonstrated in June on a rocket mission designed to carry microsatellites into space. “Should the device survive the vibration, the technology will have achieved a major milestone in its development,” Didion said. “It will mean that it is at or near operational status, making it a viable technology for use on spaceflight instruments.”

While the device is being called a pump, the prototype has no moving parts. According to Didion, unlike current cooling technologies used today by instrument and component developers, EHD does not rely on mechanical pumps and other moving parts. Instead, it uses electric fields to pump coolant through tiny ducts inside a thermal cold plate. From there, the waste heat is dumped onto a radiator and dispersed far from heat-sensitive circuitry that must operate within certain temperature ranges.

The fact that no mechanical parts are required means the new cooling system is lighter, consumes less power, (about .5W) and most importantly, can be scaled to different sizes, from larger cold plates to micro-scale electronic components and lab-on-a-chip devices. To see how this would work out, apart from the tiny pump to be tested in the rocket mission in June, a prototype EHD cold plate is also scheduled to be used as an experiment on the International Space Station in 2013.

In the meantime, Didion said, the team is continuing its work to further advance EHD, such as developing EHD pumps in microchannels that are etched onto silicon wafers. The next step is placing the technology on circuit boards, with the ultimate goal of scaling it to the chip level where the ducts would be no larger than 100 microns, or about the width of a human hair.

There’s not yet any information available on how much the technology costs, but hopefully in the future, it will be applied to more down-to-earth applications, such as a computer’s microprocessor. Then you wouldn’t have to worry about getting a water-cooling system or a huge fan if you’re big on overclocking.

After helping to develop polarized sunglasses and proliferate the use of Velcro, this just might be the next, coolest thing–quite literally–that NASA has had to offer.

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NASA Device Inducted Into Space Technology Hall of Fame – PR Newswire (press release)

Saturday, April 16th, 2011

 

 

HOUSTON, April 15, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — A rotating device developed by NASA inventors to grow better living tissue specimens was inducted into the Space Technology Hall of Fame Thursday, April 14. The Space Foundation honored the NASA team who created the device, which promises help for several diseases, during a ceremony at the 27th National Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colo.

(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20081007/38461LOGO)

Developed in 1986 by a group of NASA engineers and researchers at the agency’s Johnson Space Center in Houston, the device, known as the bioreactor, enables the growth of tissue, cancer tumors and virus cultures outside the body in space and on Earth. It has many advantages over typical laboratory methods.

Lab-grown cell cultures tend to be small, flat and two-dimensional, unlike normal tissues in the body. However, tissues grown in the bioreactor are larger and three-dimensional, with structural and chemical characteristics similar to normal tissue. The bioreactor has no internal moving parts, which minimizes forces that might damage the delicate cell cultures.

Three of the co-developers of the bioreactor also are being inducted in the Space Technology Hall of Fame: Dr. David Wolf, NASA astronaut, physician and electrical engineer; Tinh Trinh, senior mechanical engineer, Wyle Integrated Science and Engineering Group; and Ray Schwarz, chief engineer and co-founder of Synthecon Inc.

The bioreactor has been used for experiments aboard the space shuttle, the Russian Mir space station and on Earth. Researchers across the United States use this technology to study cancer, stem cells, diabetes, cartilage and nerve growth, and infectious disease.

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health used the methods to propagate the human immunodeficiency virus, or HIV, in artificial lymph node tissue. This research resulted in the ability to study the virus life cycle under controlled conditions outside of the human body.

The bioreactor is a spinoff technology that entered the commercial world when Synthecon licensed it in 1993. Regenetech Inc. licensed 11 patents from Johnson in 2001 to produce three-dimensional tissues in the bioreactor. Regenetech, through a special NASA agreement, provides the technology to researchers pursuing rare disease treatments. In December, 2010, Emerging Healthcare Solutions Inc. acquired a sublicense from Regenetech to use the bioreactor. The bioreactor is manufactured for commercial sale by Synthecon.

A closed tubular cylinder forms the bioreactor’s cell culture chamber, which is filled with a liquid medium in which cells grow. The chamber rotates around a horizontal axis, allowing the cells to develop in an environment similar to the free fall of microgravity. Oxygen, required by cells for growth, is fed into the liquid medium through a porous wall in the chamber. The importance of this cell culture technique is that fluid mechanical conditions obtained in microgravity, and emulated on Earth, allow the growth of tissues in the laboratory that cannot be grown any other way.

The 2011 Space Technology Hall of Fame organizational inductees are those that developed the technology and refined it for commercial use: NASA’s Johnson Space Center, Regenetech Inc. and Synthecon Inc. All three are based in Houston.

For more information about the Space Technology Hall of Fame inducted technologies, organizations and individuals, visit:

http://www.spacetechhalloffame.org

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov

SOURCE NASA

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RELATED LINKShttp://www.nasa.gov

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NASA Advisory Council Technology and Innovation Committee Meeting 28-29 April 2011

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 68 (Friday, April 8, 2011)] [Notices] [Page 19793] From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov] [FR Doc No: 2011-8457]

NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION

[Notice: (11-031)]

NASA Advisory Council; Technology and Innovation Committee; Meeting

AGENCY: National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

ACTION: Notice of meeting.

SUMMARY: In accordance with the Federal Advisory Committee Act, Public Law 92-463, as amended, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration announces a meeting of the Technology and Innovation Committee of the NASA Advisory Council. The meeting will be held for the purpose of reviewing the Space Technology programs and review knowledge management and technology transfer activities within the Office of the Chief Technologist.

DATES: Thursday, April 28, 2011, 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Local Time and Friday, April 29, 2011, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Local Time.

ADDRESSES: NASA Headquarters, 300 E Street, SW., Room MIC-6A (6H45), Washington, DC 20546.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Mike Green, Office of the Chief Technologist, NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC 20546, (202) 358-4710, fax (202) 358-4078, or g.m.green@nasa.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The meeting will be open to the public up to the capacity of the room. The agenda for the meeting includes the following topics:

–Office of the Chief Technologist Update.

–Space Technology Programs Updates.

–Knowledge management and technology transfer and licensing activities update.

–Update on technology and innovation in NASA Commercial and Emerging Space activities.

It is imperative that the meeting be held on these dates to accommodate the scheduling priorities of the key participants. Attendees will be requested to sign a register and to comply with NASA security requirements, including the presentation of a valid picture ID, before receiving an access badge. Foreign nationals attending this meeting will be required to provide a copy of their passport, visa, or green card in addition to providing the following information no less than 10 working days prior to the meeting: Full name; gender; date/place of birth; citizenship; visa/green card information (number, type, expiration date); passport information (number, country, expiration date); employer/affiliation information (name of institution, address, country, telephone); title/position of attendee. To expedite admittance, attendees with U.S. citizenship can provide identifying information 3 working days in advance by contacting Mr. Mike Green via e-mail at g.m.green@nasa.gov or by telephone at (202) 358-4710.

P. Diane Rausch, Advisory Committee Management Officer, National Aeronautics and Space Administration. [FR Doc. 2011-8457 Filed 4-7-11; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE P

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Virtual Incubation Awarded Contract to Evaluate NASA Technologies – SunHerald.com

Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Virtual Incubation Company has been awarded a $100,000 contract to assist NASA in evaluating commercial opportunities for promising, cutting-edge medical technologies. NASA’s Human Research Program develops a significant amount of technology each year that advances the frontiers of medical science and can offer tremendous benefit to society. Virtual Incubation Company (VIC) will use its expertise in technology venture development to assist NASA in identifying technologies from this program that have the strongest commercial potential. VIC will conduct thorough market and competitive intelligence analyses and develop commercialization strategies.

VIC is a technology venture development firm located in the Arkansas Research and Technology Park in Fayetteville, AR. VIC brings together the essential elements needed to establish new technology ventures and maximize the opportunity for product development and commercialization success. VIC has a history of building successful companies by developing early-stage technologies, typically licensed from universities and federal laboratories, into market-focused products. The company has a team of 17 business development professionals and provides complete management teams to its portfolio companies during their early stages of growth.

Kimberley Fuller, VIC’s Director of Market Research and Business Development, will oversee the project. Ms. Fuller has over 20 years of experience in conducting both quantitative and qualitative market research, completing in-depth competitive landscape analyses, identifying high-value market niches for new products, and developing actionable commercialization strategies. Ms. Fuller’s industry expertise spans biotechnology, medical devices, pharmaceuticals, and financial services. “We are very excited about this opportunity to work with some of the nation’s best scientists and engineers. I believe we can bring significant value in helping NASA find avenues for commercializing its technologies,” said Ms. Fuller. Virtual Incubation Company currently has 13 portfolio companies in various-stages of development. These companies range from new companies seeking their first funding to companies with established product lines and growing revenues.

Business Wire – Kimberley Fuller, Virtual Incubation Company’s Director of Market Research and Business Development, will oversee the NASA commercialization strategies project.

For more information about Virtual Incubation Company, please visit http://www.virtual-incubation.com

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6656789&lang=en

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NASA Technology Day on Capitol Hill – Space Ref (press release)

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

image

On the same day that Robonaut 2, the first humanoid robot in space, emerged from his protective packaging onboard the International Space Station, its twin entertained a crowd back on Earth at the annual NASA Technology Day on Capitol Hill. Developed jointly by NASA and General Motors, Robonaut 2 (R2) is a robotic assistant that can work alongside humans–whether astronauts in space or workers in U.S. manufacturing plants. R2 also is a powerful example of the benefits of NASA partnerships and technology.

R2 was one of 15 innovative technologies displayed at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center in Washington on March 15, showcasing a range of NASA technologies that are improving life for people on Earth. Held each year to inform Congress and the public about the secondary benefits of NASA partnerships and technology, the 2011 event featured innovations in areas ranging from solar power to medical ultrasound.

The spirit of NASA Technology Day has its roots in the 1958 Space Act that created NASA, mandating that the agency transfer as much of its technology as possible for the benefit of the public. The transfer, application, and commercialization of NASA-funded technology can occur in many ways–through knowledge sharing, technical assistance, intellectual property licensing, cooperative research and technology projects, and other forms of partnership.

Since 1976, NASA’s annual Spinoff publication has documented more than 1,700 spinoff technologies, some of which were on display at NASA Technology Day. One such example, a medical ultrasound diagnostic technique for long-distance use, was derived from NASA’s Advanced Diagnostic Ultrasound in Microgravity (ADUM) experiment, conducted to develop ways of diagnosing certain medical conditions in space.

A related device developed by Mediphan, a Canadian company with operations in Springfield, NJ, allows people with minimal medical training to send diagnostic-quality ultrasound images and video to medical professionals via the Internet in near-real time. Professional sports teams, Olympians, mountain climbers, and communities in remote locations have all received medical attention from distant doctors using the technology.

Other NASA spinoffs featured at NASA Technology Day included environmental technologies such as NASA’s most-licensed technology to date, Emulsified Zero-Valent Iron (EZVI). EZVI originated with the cleaning of contaminated groundwater at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Today, it neutralizes toxic chemicals in groundwater around the world. Also on display was a bacteria-based technology developed for water purification in space by Micro-Bac International of Round Rock, Texas. The microbial solutions are now being used to treat wastewater and oil spills, such as the 2010 spill that occurred in the Gulf of Mexico.

In addition to enhancing the nation’s health and environment, NASA technology also is enhancing public safety. With the help of NASA funding, BRS Aerospace of St. Paul, MN, developed a rocket-powered parachute that deploys in less than one second to bring small aircraft safely to the ground. To date, this technology has saved more than 260 lives.

“What NASA does on behalf of the American people is reaching new heights,” said NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver, who spoke at the event.

Representative Dana Rohrabacher of California, Representative Chaka Fattah of Pennsylvania, and NASA Chief Technologist Bobby Braun all spoke about the ways that NASA technology contributes to a happier and healthier society.

“The innovators’ stories are just tremendous,” said Braun. “They believe in the new products and services and societal benefits they are creating, and NASA is with them in that belief.”

Other exhibits of innovations that are still in development and testing included an early cataract detection technique, a 3-D camera instrument to assist in brain surgery, a one-of-a-kind manufacturing technique, an engine nozzle to quiet aircraft noise, and highly efficient solar power technology. Also on display were examples of successful NASA partnerships that have resulted in innovative space technology, including a solar sail, rendezvous and docking technology, smart phone technology for satellites, and an inflatable aerodynamic decelerator.

“By making these investments in technology, NASA is helping the nation remain a technological leader,” said Braun. “It’s a global, economic, and technological competition. For this country to stay at the forefront of that competition, we have to make investments in that technology–like those that NASA is making.”

NASA Astronauts Tracy Caldwell Dyson and Colonel Doug Wheelock toured NASA Technology Day and relayed fascinating stories about life on the International Space Station and the tremendous value of space technology. Wheelock expressed his appreciation for space research and technology that bring spinoff applications to Earth.

“Knowing that we have a future in space exploration and developing science onboard the Space Station,” said Wheelock, “we can bring it back home and put it to work here to make all of our lives better.”

To learn more about how NASA technology has moved into the marketplace and contributed to NASA Missions and the Nation, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/offices/oct/success/index.html

For more information about NASA’s Spinoff publication, visit: http://www.sti.nasa.gov/tto

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NASA Technology Day on Capitol Hill

Saturday, March 19th, 2011

image

On the same day that Robonaut 2, the first humanoid robot in space, emerged from his protective packaging onboard the International Space Station, its twin entertained a crowd back on Earth at the annual NASA Technology Day on Capitol Hill. Developed jointly by NASA and General Motors, Robonaut 2 (R2) is a robotic assistant that can work alongside humans–whether astronauts in space or workers in U.S. manufacturing plants. R2 also is a powerful example of the benefits of NASA partnerships and technology.

R2 was one of 15 innovative technologies displayed at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center in Washington on March 15, showcasing a range of NASA technologies that are improving life for people on Earth. Held each year to inform Congress and the public about the secondary benefits of NASA partnerships and technology, the 2011 event featured innovations in areas ranging from solar power to medical ultrasound.

The spirit of NASA Technology Day has its roots in the 1958 Space Act that created NASA, mandating that the agency transfer as much of its technology as possible for the benefit of the public. The transfer, application, and commercialization of NASA-funded technology can occur in many ways–through knowledge sharing, technical assistance, intellectual property licensing, cooperative research and technology projects, and other forms of partnership.

Since 1976, NASA’s annual Spinoff publication has documented more than 1,700 spinoff technologies, some of which were on display at NASA Technology Day. One such example, a medical ultrasound diagnostic technique for long-distance use, was derived from NASA’s Advanced Diagnostic Ultrasound in Microgravity (ADUM) experiment, conducted to develop ways of diagnosing certain medical conditions in space.

A related device developed by Mediphan, a Canadian company with operations in Springfield, NJ, allows people with minimal medical training to send diagnostic-quality ultrasound images and video to medical professionals via the Internet in near-real time. Professional sports teams, Olympians, mountain climbers, and communities in remote locations have all received medical attention from distant doctors using the technology.

Other NASA spinoffs featured at NASA Technology Day included environmental technologies such as NASA’s most-licensed technology to date, Emulsified Zero-Valent Iron (EZVI). EZVI originated with the cleaning of contaminated groundwater at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Today, it neutralizes toxic chemicals in groundwater around the world. Also on display was a bacteria-based technology developed for water purification in space by Micro-Bac International of Round Rock, Texas. The microbial solutions are now being used to treat wastewater and oil spills, such as the 2010 spill that occurred in the Gulf of Mexico.

In addition to enhancing the nation’s health and environment, NASA technology also is enhancing public safety. With the help of NASA funding, BRS Aerospace of St. Paul, MN, developed a rocket-powered parachute that deploys in less than one second to bring small aircraft safely to the ground. To date, this technology has saved more than 260 lives.

“What NASA does on behalf of the American people is reaching new heights,” said NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver, who spoke at the event.

Representative Dana Rohrabacher of California, Representative Chaka Fattah of Pennsylvania, and NASA Chief Technologist Bobby Braun all spoke about the ways that NASA technology contributes to a happier and healthier society.

“The innovators’ stories are just tremendous,” said Braun. “They believe in the new products and services and societal benefits they are creating, and NASA is with them in that belief.”

Other exhibits of innovations that are still in development and testing included an early cataract detection technique, a 3-D camera instrument to assist in brain surgery, a one-of-a-kind manufacturing technique, an engine nozzle to quiet aircraft noise, and highly efficient solar power technology. Also on display were examples of successful NASA partnerships that have resulted in innovative space technology, including a solar sail, rendezvous and docking technology, smart phone technology for satellites, and an inflatable aerodynamic decelerator.

“By making these investments in technology, NASA is helping the nation remain a technological leader,” said Braun. “It’s a global, economic, and technological competition. For this country to stay at the forefront of that competition, we have to make investments in that technology–like those that NASA is making.”

NASA Astronauts Tracy Caldwell Dyson and Colonel Doug Wheelock toured NASA Technology Day and relayed fascinating stories about life on the International Space Station and the tremendous value of space technology. Wheelock expressed his appreciation for space research and technology that bring spinoff applications to Earth.

“Knowing that we have a future in space exploration and developing science onboard the Space Station,” said Wheelock, “we can bring it back home and put it to work here to make all of our lives better.”

To learn more about how NASA technology has moved into the marketplace and contributed to NASA Missions and the Nation, visit: http://www.nasa.gov/offices/oct/success/index.html

For more information about NASA’s Spinoff publication, visit: http://www.sti.nasa.gov/tto

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