NASA sends the Mona Lisa to the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter with lasers

NASA sends the Mona Lisa to the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter with lasers

NASA is no stranger to shooting lasers at spacecraft orbiting the moon (seriously), but it’s now moving beyond “basic” tasks like tracking their location. The space agency announced yesterday that it has successfully demonstrated one-way laser communication with a satellite orbiting the moon for the first time. For that milestone, NASA chose to send an image of the Mona Lisa, which was transmitted to the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter in a series of laser pulses beamed from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. Not surprisingly, that means of communication introduced its share of challenges, including interference from turbulence in the Earth’s atmosphere. To compensate for that, NASA used what’s known as Reed-Solomon coding to reconstruct the image (pictured after the break), which is the same process used for error correction in CDs and DVDs. You can find more details from NASA, and a video explaining the whole process, at the source link below.

[Image credit: NASA, Tom Zagwodzki/Goddard Space Flight Center]

NASA sends the Mona Lisa to the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter with lasers

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: The Inquirer

Source: NASA

Robot fish glides out of Michigan State University, tells you if the water is clean

Robot fish glides out of Michigan State University, tells you if the water is clean

Autonomous fish might make great leaders, but it turns out that robot flippers are a huge drain on battery life. Not a problem for Xiaobo Tan — he and a group of Michigan State University scientists have built a robotic fish that glides through the water. Tan says the machine, dubbed Grace (Gliding Robot ACE), swims too , but the constant flipper movement can kill the battery in just a few hours. “This is why we integrated both locomotion modes,” he explained. “Such integration allows the robot to adapt to different environments, from shallow streams to deep lakes.” Grace is designed to scour lakes and rivers for data to help cleaning efforts, and older prototypes have successfully found traces of crude oil in once spoiled riverbeds. The redesigned robot looks more like an airplane than a fish, but it’s hard to argue with results — the team says Grace should be able to glide through the water almost indefinitely. Check out the team’s press release after the break.

Show full PR text

New robotic fish glides indefinitely

New design saves energy

IMAGE: A team of Michigan State University scientists has developed a robotic fish that can swim and glide long distances while gathering data such as water quality and temperature.
Click here for more information.

A high-tech robotic fish hatched at Michigan State University has a new look. A new skill. And a new name.

MSU scientists have made a number of improvements on the fish, including the ability to glide long distances, which is the most important change to date. The fish now has the ability to glide through the water practically indefinitely, using little to no energy, while gathering valuable data that can aid in the cleaning of our lakes and rivers.

Designed and built by Xiaobo Tan, MSU associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, and his team, the fish is equipped with an array of sensors that not only allow it to travel autonomously, but also measure water temperature, quality and other pertinent facts.

“Swimming requires constant flapping of the tail,” Tan said, “which means the battery is constantly being discharged and typically wouldn’t last more than a few hours.”

The disadvantage to gliding, he said, is that it is slower and less maneuverable.

“This is why we integrated both locomotion modes – gliding and swimming – in our robot,” Tan said. “Such integration also allows the robot to adapt to different environments, from shallow streams to deep lakes, from calm ponds to rivers, with rapid currents.”

The robot’s ability to glide is achieved through a newly installed pump that pushes water in and out of the fish, depending on if the scientists want the robot to ascend or descend. Also, the robot’s battery pack sits on a kind of rail that moves backward and forward, in sync with the pumping action, to allow the robot to glide through water on a desired path.

The robotic fish now has a name: Grace, which stands for “Gliding Robot ACE.”

Late last year Tan and his team took Grace for a test drive on the Kalamazoo River, where it exceeded all expectations.

“She swam at three sites along the river and wirelessly sent back sensor readings,” Tan said. “I’m not sure, but we may have set a world record – demonstrating robotic fish-based sampling with commercial water-quality sensors in a real-world environment.”

The Kalamazoo River is, of course, the site of a 2010 oil spill. Interestingly, the robot’s crude oil sensor had some readings upriver from where the spill occurred, although the readings downstream from the spill site were higher.

Underwater gliders, or seagliders, are becoming more common in oceanography. In fact, one traveled all the way across the Atlantic Ocean in late 2009.

One major difference in Grace is that, aside from its swimming capability, it is about 10 times smaller and lighter than a commercial underwater glider.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: MSU

NASA announces test of inflatable space capsule, set for deployment in 2015

NASA announces tests of inflatable space capsule, set for deployment in 2015

There are two ways that you can go about building a blowup space capsule. One is to construct an enclosure that self-destructs at a moment’s notice to disappear any evidence of the night before. The other is to build an inflatable bounce house-like contraption. NASA has decided on the latter. Yep, the space agency has just inked a $17.8 million contract with a Las Vegas firm known as Bigelow Aerospace, which has been given the task to build an inflatable capsule that’ll serve as a bonus room for astronauts aboard the International Space Station. Known as the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module — or BEAM, if you’re looking to get somewhere in a hurry — the enclosure will measure 4 meters long and 3 meters wide, and will be transported to the ISS in a deflated state via the SpaceX Dragon capsule in 2015. Once attached to the aft port of the Tranquility node, astronauts will monitor the BEAM for two years to study conditions such as temperature and radiation levels.

As you’d hope, much of Bigelow’s efforts are dedicated to ensuring the safety of the BEAM’s occupants. To that end, it’s currently developing a Kevlar-like shielding that’s resistant to high-speed impacts from space debris and micrometeoroids. The hope is to prove the inflatable structure’s suitability for use in space tourism and research. Once the test period is complete, the BEAM will be jettisoned from the ISS, at which point it’ll burn up upon reentry into the atmosphere. For a peek at the installation process, be sure to hit up the source link.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: New Scientist

Source: NASA

Bill Gates to chat education on PBS in first TED Talk made for TV

Bill Gates to chat education on PBS in first TED Talk made for TV

Word comes by way of The Wrap that PBS is slated to air the very first TED Talk produced for TV on April 16th, and it’ll feature Bill Gates, to boot. The special sets its sights on discussing education and will include the likes of educators Geoffrey Canada and Sir Ken Robinson alongside Microsoft’s co-founder. In advance of the broadcast, the program will be taped at the Brooklyn Academy of Music’s Harvey Theater on April 4th. There’s no word on whether tickets are up for grabs to attend the event, but we’d start searching for friends who know Gates if you’d prefer the live experience.

[Image credit: World Economic Forum, Flickr]

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: The Verge

Source: The Wrap

Google web search reveals English letter frequency, helps our Scrabble hustle

Scrabble for iPad

Wordsmiths go to great lengths to master a game of Scrabble or Words With Friends. Rarely are their efforts quite so calculated, however, as what we’re seeing today. After Google research director Peter Norvig used his company’s search engine to determine letter frequency in the English language, Deadspin and developer Kyle Rimkus compared it against Scrabble’s point system and available words to determine which letters generate the most value relative to how often they can play. In short: H, Y and Z produce the most bang for the alphabetic buck, while J and Q are plagues on the rack that are seldom worth saving for a special moment. We can’t guarantee that following the Google-derived tips will have serious opponents begging for mercy — a wide vocabulary is often the real clincher — but they may help a few of us wondering what to play on that triple word score.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: Peter Norvig, Deadspin

DARPA unveils plans for undersea payloads that surface on command

DARPA unveils plans for undersea payloads that surface on command

DARPA already intends to set a drone ship out to sea, and now it’s revealed plans for undersea payloads that lie dormant for years and launch themselves to the surface when remotely commanded. Dubbed Upward Falling Payloads, the containers will carry non-lethal cargo such as small UAVs or networking hardware, and take advantage of the “cheap stealth” their position underwater grants them. Since the vision is to have a fleet of UFPs spread throughout ocean floors, it’ll help the Navy “get close to the areas we need to affect, or become widely distributed without delay,” according to DARPA Program Manager Andy Coon. DARPA is aiming to tap engineering talent from telecom companies to the oil exploration industry in order to solve challenges such as communications used to wake up payload nodes and launching them to the surface. There’s no word on when UFPs will begin lurking sea floors, but DARPA is already looking for proposals to help build them.

[Image credit: Alwbutler, Flickr]

Continue reading DARPA unveils plans for undersea payloads that surface on command

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: Gizmag

Source: Darpa

DCM Dealer software platform mines social media for stock sentiment, Wall Street licks its chops

DCM Dealer software platform mines social media for stock sentiment, Wall Street licks its chops

In this episode of “What could possibly go wrong?!“, allow us to introduce you to DCM Dealer. Billed as an “online trading platform,” this here project was whipped up by the same London-based investment outfit (DCM Capital) that went belly-up after losing some $40 million in assets in just one month during the summer of 2011. Granted, that was a pretty tough time in the market, and it did manage to squeeze out a 1.9 percent gain in the period it was open, but it’s still worth keeping in mind. Now, the firm is hoping to catch a second wind with a tool that mines Twitter, Facebook, and the whole of social media in order to pick up clues about the public’s view on a stock. Reportedly, it’ll spit out real-time ratings from 0 (negative) to 100 (positive), giving investors yet another “leading indicator” on what to invest in flip for a quick buck.

Founder Paul Hawtin confesses: “This is not some kind of holy grail of buy-sell signals that’s guaranteed to make you money. This is an additional layer of market information…markets are driven by greed and fear, so if you can understand fear and quantify it in real-time, you could use that to protect yourself.” We’ll leave it to the 99 percent to comment on the idea below.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: CNBC, DCM

Researchers end quest to drill through 3km of ice after fuel runs low

Researchers end quest to drill through 3km of ice

Sad to say, but British researchers have called off their quest to drill through the 3km-thick sheet of ice over Lake Ellsworth in Antarctica. The mission to find organisms that have evolved in isolation for at least 100,000 years was called off after the team realized it didn’t have enough fuel to power its water jet drill all the way to the lake. Complications arose trying to connect the drill’s main hose to a cavity of water created in the ice by a short pilot hose. The team burned through so much fuel trying to get the hose connected properly that they no longer had enough left to reach the lake below the glacier’s surface. The plan has not been scrapped entirely, however. The scientists are heading back to the UK, along with all their kit, to revise their plan and modify their equipment for the next attempt. Still, it appears breaking through to Lake Ellsworth is at least three years out. For more from geoscientist and expedition member Martin Siegert, check out the source link.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: New Scientist

Newly discovered quasar cluster may be the largest structure in the universe

Quasar cluster TKTK

The Large Quasar Group isn’t just a psychedelic cover band, but also an enormous cluster of quasars forming what an international team of astronomers led by University of Central Lancashire are calling “the largest known structure in the universe.” When the name isn’t being reappropriated for British laser tag, its being used to describe the distant (and therefore aged) nuclei of galaxies which often group together in clusters; this cluster just happens to also be the largest such structure ever discovered, making it the de facto largest in the known universe. Resultantly, it also may challenge an Einstein-derived supposition that, “the universe, when viewed at a sufficiently large scale, looks the same no matter where you are observing it from.” Of course, you’d have to be incredibly huge to determine conclusively whether or not that’s the case, but that Einstein guy was pretty good at making educated guesses.

[Photo credit: M. Kornmesser, ESO]

Filed under: ,

Comments

Via: HuffPo UK

Source: Royal Astronomical Society

Fireflies’ bumpy abdomens may lead to brighter LEDs

Fireflies' bumpy abdomens may lead to brighter LEDs

Scientists who evidently spend too much time with fireflies have managed to put all that bug-watching to good use: developing brighter LEDs. One problem with that tech is that a lot of the light gets reflected back into the device due to the way photons travel through LED materials, causing them to lose efficiency. But researchers from the University of Namur in Belgium noticed that the misshapen abdominal scales on fireflies act to prevent reflection, letting more light from the luminous insect’s “lantern” shine out. Scientists in Canada took it a step further by doping standard gallium-nitride LEDs with a similar material, and found that light transmission increased by 55 percent. They claimed that such a process could be done to “nearly every commercially available LED,” which could one day bring insect-inspired energy savings to commercial products.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: MIT Technology Review