24/7 Space News  
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites - Powered By Bing
Robonaut Developing A Smarter More Sensitive Side

These NASA-inspired innovations are also paving the way for some important commercial uses for the fiber-optic sensors.

Washington DC (SPX) Mar 20, 2005
In the not-so-distant future, the hand tightening bolts during space structure assembly might not be human. Tomorrow's astronauts will find themselves working side by side in space with human-like robots called "Robonauts." And while the faceless machines might look a little strange, these Robonauts are really quite sensitive.

Don't expect to see them making the rounds on the talk-show circuit discussing their feelings, though. Their kind of sensitivity is strictly high-tech.

Now the technology bringing these Space-Age helpers to life is also at work in some surprising places. One common element drives these innovations, both on Earth and in space: sensors.

When the Robonaut was on the drawing board at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Texas, developers needed advanced sensors to measure the movements of the human-like hands and forearms they were designing.

These "hands" had to be capable of exerting just the right amount of force and control to perform critical jobs. They needed to mirror the skillfulness of a human hand.

For example, when a person reaches out, picks up a foam cup filled with coffee and lifts it to drink, the hand responds automatically. The fingers close around the cup with the right amount of grip to pick it up without crushing the cup or dropping it.

To simulate this kind of control in the hands of the Robonaut, Astro Technology, in Houston, developed the Fiber-Optic Sensor System.

This system design overcomes some of the limitations of older robotic methods that were more cumbersome. The new fiber-optic sensors use a light source, so they are immune to electrical "noise" and require significantly less cabling to measure the bending of the "fingers" and force of the touch.

Add to this the reduced size and weight of the components, and they are ideal for space flight and operation.

This not only is great news for Robonaut, but these NASA-inspired innovations are also paving the way for some important commercial uses for the fiber-optic sensors.

The sensors may help to tap new deepwater oil reserves around the world. This would ensure a flow of fuel for the future, while protecting the environment by preventing catastrophic pipeline failure.

Astro Technology's engineers adapted the system to provide this new monitoring capability to the oil and gas industry. The sensors can measure fatigue on undersea pipelines, as well as offshore drilling and oil production rigs. The system can use the risk management software the company developed to calculate and predict repair needs.

Other industrial uses envisioned for these super-sensors may include aircraft structural monitoring and auto industry applications. Virtually any situation requiring small but accurate monitoring sensors might benefit from the technology.

Meanwhile in space, these sensors will continue supporting current and future development of the Robonauts. The software could also be adapted to help monitor other critical elements of space vehicle structures and their propellant lines for added safety.

So whether in space, on Earth or under the sea, NASA's "sensitive" technology is lending a hand.

Related Links
Spinoff Online: Commercialized NASA Technology
NASA Connections to Everyday Life
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express


New Machines Could Turn Homes Into Small Factories
Bath, UK (SPX) Mar 18, 2005
A revolutionary machine which can make everything from a cup to a clarinet quickly and cheaply could be in all our homes in the next few years.

.




.




Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • Space Watch: Spacefaring By Bureaucrats
  • ESA Announces Call For Next Earth Explorer Missions
  • Space Race 2: Spaceshipone, Post X Prize
  • Spacehab Receives $1 Million New Vision Contract Option From NASA

  • Hourglass Shaped Craters Filled With Traces Of Glaciers
  • Opportunity Rover By Buried Vostok Crater
  • Fire And Ice: Mars Images Reveal Recent Volcanic And Glacial Activity
  • Tests Planned for Instrument on Mars Rover

  • Atlas 5 Lifts Massive Satellite For Inmarsat
  • First Inmarsat-4 Satellite Ready For Launch Thursday
  • US Air Force Lifts Ban On Boeing In Satellite Launches
  • Brazilian Military Team Attends Russian Space Launch

  • NASA Researchers Use Imaging Radar To Detect Coastal Pollution
  • Earth From Space: Image Of The Week
  • New Marine Weather Service Expected To Begin On Sirius Late This Year
  • Europe Under Snow

  • Pluto's Horizon Gets Page One Treatment At NASA.gov
  • NASA Awards Contract For Kepler Mission Photometer
  • Pluto At 75: A Uniquely American Anniversary
  • Discovery of Pluto Reaches 75th Anniversary

  • Temperature Inside Collapsing Bubble Four Times That Of Sun
  • In The Stars: Starmaking's Helping Hand
  • Newly Seen Force May Help Gravity In Star Formation
  • Brightest Explosion Ever Observed Overwhelms Telescopes

  • En Route To Mars, Via The Moon
  • Moonbeams Shine On Einstein, Galileo And Newton
  • India "A Step ahead" Of China In Satellite Technology: Space Chief
  • Confidence Restored, Japan Aims For Station On The Moon In 2025

  • Astrata Completes Acquisition Of SureTrack
  • Savi Technology And Comtech Telecom Combine RFID, GPS And Sat Comms
  • New Trimble Site Positioning System Advances Construction Applications
  • Nextel Comms And MapQuest Launch "Find Me" Service On GPS-Mobile Phones

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement