The Perito Moreno Glacier in Argentina is seen from the International Space Station on Feb. 21, 2012. A new NASA Space Technology Research Institute will specialize in advancing quantum sensing technology for improved mass change measurements from orbit, which will help scientists understand the movement of ice and water on Earth’s surface. Credits: NASA
New technology is a key to helping NASA
advance its long-term exploration goals for the benefit of all. To support its
effort, the agency announced Thursday it will create two new institutes to
develop technology in critical areas for engineering and climate research.
Two new Space Technology Research
Institutes (STRIs)
will leverage teams led by U.S. universities to create multidisciplinary
research and technology development programs critical to NASA's future. By
bringing together science, engineering, and other disciplines from
universities, industry, and non-profits, the institutes aim to impact future
aerospace capabilities through investments in early-stage technology.
One of the research institutes will focus
on quantum sensing technology in support of climate research. The other will
work to improve understanding and help enable rapid certification of metal
parts created using advanced manufacturing techniques.
"We're thrilled to draw on the
expertise of these multi-university teams to create technology for some of our
most pressing needs," said Jim Reuter, associate administrator for the
agency’s Space Technology Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
"Their work will enable next-generation science for studying our home
planet and broaden the use of 3D-printed metal parts for spaceflight with
state-of-the-art modeling."
Each institute will receive up to $15
million over five years.
A
NASA project called Long Life Additive Manufacturing Assembly (LLAMA) is 3D
printing methods for building rocket engine components. A new NASA Space
Technology Research Institute will develop advanced computer models to help
engineers better understand and validate the characteristics of additively
manufactured metal parts for use in spaceflight. Credits: NASA
Quantum
Pathways Institute
The University of Texas at Austin will
lead the Quantum Pathways Institute, focused on advancing quantum sensing
technology for next-generation Earth science applications. Such technology
would enable new understanding of our planet and the effects of climate
change.
Quantum sensors use quantum physics
principles to potentially collect more precise data and enable unprecedented
science measurements. These sensors could be particularly useful for satellites
in orbit around Earth to collect mass change data – a type of measurement that
can tell scientists about how ice, oceans, and land water are moving and
changing. Though the basic physics and technology for quantum sensors have been
proven in concept, work is required to develop quantum sensors at the
precisions necessary for next-generation science needs during spaceflight
missions.
"Quantum sensing methods have shown a
great deal of promise in computing, communications, and now for Earth science
remote sensing applications," said Dr. Srinivas Bettadpur, principal
investigator for the institute and professor of aerospace engineering and
engineering mechanics at the University of Texas at Austin. "Our intent is
to advance this technology and get it ready for space as soon as we can."
The institute will work to further advance
the physics underlying quantum sensors, design how these sensors could be built
for space missions and understand how mission design and systems engineering
would need to adapt to accommodate this new technology.
Partners on the institute include
University of Colorado Boulder; University of California, Santa Barbara;
California Institute of Technology; and the National Institute of Standards and
Technology.
Institute
for Model-Based Qualification & Certification of Additive Manufacturing
(IMQCAM)
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh
will lead Institute for Model-based Qualification & Certification of
Additive Manufacturing (IMQCAM) aiming to improve computer models of 3D-printed
– also called additively manufactured – metal parts and expand their utility in
spaceflight applications. The institute will be co-led by Johns Hopkins
University in Baltimore.
Metal parts 3D-printed are made from
powdered metals, which are melted in specific ways and shaped into useful
parts. Such parts could be useful for things like rocket engines – giving more
flexibility to create new parts when designs change – or as part of a human
outpost on the Moon, where bringing pre-fabricated parts would be expensive and
limiting. However, efficient certification and use of such parts requires
high-accuracy predictions of their characteristics.
"The internal structure of this type
of part is much different than what's produced by any other method," said
Tony Rollett, principal investigator for the institute and US Steel professor
of metallurgical engineering and materials science at Carnegie Mellon
University. "The institute will focus on creating the models NASA and
others in industry would need to use these parts on a daily basis."
Detailed computer models, known as digital
twins, will allow engineers to understand the parts' capabilities and
limitations – such as how much stress the parts can take before breaking. Such
models will provide the predictability of part properties based on their
processing that is key for certifying the parts for use. The institute will
develop digital twins for 3D-printed parts made from spaceflight materials that
are commonly used for 3D printing, as well as evaluating and modeling new
materials.
Somnath Ghosh, the Michael G. Callas
professor in civil and systems engineering at Johns Hopkins University’s
Whiting School of Engineering, will serve as the co-principal investigator and
will co-direct the institute, along with Rollett. Additional partners on the
institute include Vanderbilt University, University of Texas at San Antonio,
University of Virginia, Case Western Reserve University, Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory, Southwest Research Institute, and Pratt
& Whitney.
STMD's Space Technology Research Grants program funds each STRI. For more information about NASA's space technology work, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/spacetech
Source: NASA Awards Advance 3D Printing, Quantum Tech for Climate Research | NASA
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