Future covered: NASA developing space-bound submarines and printable spacecraft


As Curiosity takes its first steps on the surface of Mars, NASA has already decided what comes next after the rover, namely a submarine to explore Jupiter’s ice-covered moon, Europa, and a robot to land-sail across Venus. These are among 28 futuristic projects selected by NASA’s Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) Program. The ambitious projects are split into the categories of Phase I, which has gathered brand new ideas to be developed from scratch, and Phase II, the survivors of 2011’s program. The 18 winners of Phase I have been awarded $100,000 each to develop their ideas for one year. This category boasts the boldest projects including a Venus-bound craft which would “sail” the planet using electromagnetic fields. As NIAC studies all aspects of space exploration, a certain number of its projects cover hazards of planetary missions, such as the abnormal radiation that spacemen may encounter at an on-ground station. Thus, “Water Walls”, another ambition under NIAC’s Phase I, is a concept where undesirable material like urine or fecal matter is removed from a station’s waste water and processed to act as a radiation shield. Ten more projects, coming under the code name Phase II, have emerged from Phase I of the previous year’s contest. The researchers will be sponsored to the sum of $500,000 each to go on with their research for two more years. A noticeable project in Phase II is a spacesuit set to answer the dangers that zero- or micro-gravity pose to astronauts’ health, including to their muscles, blood circulation and digestion. The V2Suit, stuffed with dozens of gyroscopes and accelerometers, applies resistance to the astronaut's movements through flywheels. This replicates Earth-like gravity even in conditions found on other planets or in space. Printable spacecraft, a Phase II project of apparent simplicity, builds an unbelievable picture of uploading a designed spacecraft from your laptop to a printer and collecting it later in the day from the output tray. The engineers behind the study want to make use of flexible printed electronics such as the ones used in cellular phones and PDAs. "These selections represent the best and most creative new ideas for future technologies, which have the potential to radically improve how NASA missions explore new frontiers," says Michael Gazarik, director of NASA's Space Technology Program, commenting on the awards. "NASA is taking the long-term view of technological investment and the advancement that is essential for accomplishing our missions." NASA’s “long-term view” means the 28 projects selected last week will take at least ten years to mature and get anywhere near an actual mission. Source: Sam Daily Times
Read More........

Smart thinking spurs European e_mobility projects

Renewable Energy Magazine, By Toby Price: Four smart European projects are driving electro-mobility forward, based on Information and Communication Technologies (ICT). Demonstrating that CO2 reduction in urban areas and beyond is possible, as well as raising the public's awareness of the benefits of electro-mobility, are key goals of four European electro-mobility projects (MOBI.Europe, ICT4EVEU, MOLECULES and sm@rtCEM) that were launched together on an event at the European Parliament on 8 February 2012. Only consumer acceptance and the successful adoption of new technologies such as electric vehicles will allow the EU to meet its ambitious target to have no conventionally powered vehicles in cities any more by 2050, and to reduce the transport sector's carbon emissions by 60% by then. João Jesus Caetano, MOBI.Europe project coordinator, said “Our project brings together twelve public and private entities, some of which are at the forefront of the recent technological developments on electro-mobility in five European countries: Portugal, Ireland, The Netherlands, Spain, and France. MOBI.Europe is an integration project based on Information and Communication Technology Systems that aims to guarantee the interoperability of four different on-going initiatives across Europe at both the communication and business levels.” The key objectives of the four projects presented at the European Parliament include: • Increasing industry cooperation and supporting interoperability and common standards for the benefit of end-users; • Supporting the integration of electro-mobility as an alternative urban and interurban mobility solution by local authorities; • Test and develop standards for the integration of electro-mobility systems across countries; • Test Smart Charging solutions to increase the efficiency of the network and contribute to the integration of clean energy sources into the grid; • Demonstrating directly to the public the benefits of new vehicles and services and the interoperability of the solutions at city, national and cross-border levels. “Through MOBI.Europe we expect to contribute to the definition of communication and business standards that can help set a truly pan-European interoperable network for electric vehicles in the near future. And we also expect to illustrate the fact that European companies are becoming the main world innovators on this exciting and promising field of smart-connected electro-mobility”, said João Jesus Caetano Source: Renewable Energy Magazine
Read More........