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The 'Nose' Knows A Sweet Smell Of Success

"Cyranose 320" is already at work in the food industry, as well as testing for spoilage, detecting toxic materials, water pollutants and chemical leaks.

Pasadena CA (JPL) Aug 17, 2004
Have you ever wondered why natural gas has such a distinctive odor? Because it's added purposely before being piped into our homes! The smell gives us a warning that there may be a leak.

What about detecting chemical leaks in enclosed spaces, like the International Space Station or Space Shuttle? NASA built "E-Nose" to come to the rescue.

The Agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California and the California Institute of Technology jointly developed a method for a machine to "smell." Given the catchy name E-Nose, the device is an electronic nose that uses computers and special sensing film to work much like a human nose.

E-Nose technology has the ability to send a signal to an environmental control system where a central computer decides how to handle the problem, without human interaction. The device also can be "trained" in one session to detect many specific contaminants.

"The more automated you can make this kind of thing, the better off the crew is," said Amy Ryan, principal investigator for E-Nose at JPL.

The 3-pound, paperback-book sized E-Nose took a ride on a Space Shuttle flight and successfully proved its value in identifying contaminants in the air. After that flight, JPL began working on a way to expand its capability and reduce its size.

Commercial companies were quick to see E-Nose's potential. In March 1997, JPL licensed the technology to Cyrano Sciences, of Pasadena, Calif.

The company renamed the device "Cyranose 320" and put it to work in the food industry, testing for spoilage. The technology is also being tested to detect toxic materials, water pollutants and chemical leaks.

Several medical institutions are determining how well the electronic nose can be adapted to provide physicians with a quicker and more accurate way to diagnose health issues, perhaps eliminating the need for invasive testing and unpleasant procedures.

Cyrano Sciences joined Smiths Detection in March and researchers are working on early-stage technology, with a grant from the US Department of Defense, to develop miniature sensors used principally for homeland security.

In the meantime, E-Nose technology will continue to "sniff out" ways to keep us safe here on Earth and in space as we go forward with America's Vision for Space Exploration.

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Robot Sent To Chile's Atacama Desert To Attempt To Seek Life
Pittsburgh PA (SPX) Aug 12, 2004
Carnegie Mellon University robotics and life sciences researchers will demonstrate Zoe, an autonomous rover being groomed to seek and identify life in hostile environments, at 10 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 12, at the former LTV site off Brownfield Road in Pittsburgh.







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