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NASA Spinoff: Green Design & Manufacturing
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution The National Biocomputation Center is a joint partnership between the Stanford University School of Medicine's Department of Surgery and NASA's Ames Research...
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NASA Spinoff: Green Design & Manufacturing
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution In the late 1970s, Frank Nola, an engineer at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, had an idea for reducing energy waste in small induction...
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NASA Spinoff: Green Design & Manufacturing
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution NASA's Kennedy Space Center is located on prime beachfront property along the Atlantic coast of Florida on Cape Canaveral. While beautiful,...
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NASA Spinoff: Software
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution Future spaceborne astronomy missions will require telescopes with increasingly greater power, driving the dimensions of the optics and their housing...
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NASA Spinoff: Software
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution Scientists and engineers have long used computers to model physical systems. Physical modeling is a major part of design and development...
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NASA Spinoff: Software
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution When it comes to solving some of NASA’s most challenging technical problems, the mathematical minds that make up the Computational Sciences...
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NASA Spinoff: Software
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution As NASA’s leading organization for information sciences, the Intelligent Systems Division at Ames Research Center conducts world-class computational...
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NASA Spinoff: Software
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution Design errors are costly. When it comes to creating complex systems for aerospace design and testing system readiness, engineering system requirements...
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NASA Spinoff: Manufacturing & Prototyping
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution NASA has invested considerable time and energy working with academia and private industry to develop new composite structures that are capable of...
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NASA Spinoff: Manufacturing & Prototyping
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution In June 2006, NASA scientists used extensive data transmitted from the Chandra X-ray Observatory deep space telescope to prove that up to 25 percent...
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NASA Spinoff: Manufacturing & Prototyping
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution In President Ronald Reagan’s 1984 State of the Union address, he announced plans for a U.S. space station, the equivalent of the Russian space station,...
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NASA Spinoff: Manufacturing & Prototyping
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution All objects reflect a certain amount of energy, even if it is just the electromagnetic energy created by the movement of electrically charged...
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NASA Spinoff: Manufacturing & Prototyping
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution On October 14, 1947, Captain Charles “Chuck” Yeager made history when he became the first pilot in an officially documented flight to ever break...
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NASA Spinoff: Green Design & Manufacturing
Spinoff 2007
Health and Medicine Circulation-Enhancing Device Improves CPR Noninvasive Test Detects Cardiovascular Disease Scheduling Accessory Assists Patients with Cognitive Disorders Neurospinal Screening Evaluates Nerve Function Hand-Held Instrument Fights Acne, Tops Over-the-Counter Market Multispectral Imaging Broadens Cellular...
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Internet Instrumentation
Software is currently being developed at Ohio State University that will one day help scientists operate big-budget research instruments, such as high-powered microscopes and telescopes, over the Internet. The need for such capability, which is being driven by the high cost of doing research, is growing rapidly. By using...
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NASA Briefs
The John H. Glenn Research Center introduces the Portable Unit for Metabolic Analysis (PUMA), an instrument that measures quantities indicative of human metabolic function. The PUMA makes time-resolved measurements of temperature, pressure, flow, and the partial pressures of oxygen and carbon dioxide in breath during inhalation and...
Blog: Medical
Perilous Paunch
Abdominal obesity is a known independent risk factor for heart disease. Based on results of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer cohort study (Epic-Norfolk), researchers have found that using the waist-hip ratio rather than waist measurement alone is a better predictor of heart disease risk. The research was based on...
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Tech Needs of the Week
A company is seeking a powder slurry coating technology, where substrates are coated with powder slurry in an organic binder and then heat treated to diffuse the coating onto the substrates. Any proposed powder slurry coating technology should involve a powder composition based on Co-based or Ni-based alloys. It should be a...
Blog
Cancer Protein
Researchers from Johns Hopkins and the University of Pennsylvania have uncovered another reason why the Myc protein - one of the most commonly activated proteins in cancer - is so dangerous. Myc can stop the production of at least 13 microRNAs, small pieces of nucleic acid that help control which genes are turned on and off. A...
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Single Photon Source
High-performance, single photon sources are closer to reality. A single photon can be used to implement secure optical communication, also known as quantum cryptography. According to scientists, a single photon signature that took eight hours five years back can now be achieved on a millisecond time scale. This was achieved...
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Optical Blood Monitor
An optical device that peers through the eyes of a mouse enables scientists to monitor the cells passing through its bloodstream, holding hope for researchers treating cancer and other diseases. The device, developed by researchers from the Wellman Center for Photomedicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical...
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Techs of the Week
A method to detect image position errors includes forming a first pattern with a symbol embedded therein and a second pattern which, when positioned on the first pattern, exposes the symbol if the misalignment between the first and second patterns exceeds a position error tolerance. The symbol is perceivable with the unaided eye,...
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Lasers Find Pollutants
Finding the source of pollutant emissions is no easy task when one has to look inside a dirty combustion chamber. But an Iowa State University researcher may have a solution. Terry Meyer, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Iowa State, is using laser-based sensors to capture images at upwards of thousands of...
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Current Attractions
Each month, NTB highlights tech briefs related to a particular area of technology in a special section called Technology Focus. Here are some of the technologies featured in the December issue focus on Data Acquisition.
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Technology Business Briefs
Panoramic Video Patent Portfolio. Ten issued US patents for sale. Several U.S. applications: Computer Graphics Processing and Selective Visual Display Systems, Television, and Optics. Watermarking, Cryptography & Anti-Piracy Patent Portfolio. Eleven issued US patents for sale. Several U.S. applications: Electrical...
Blog: Medical
Mega MRI
The world's most powerful medical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine at the University of Illinois at Chicago has passed safety tests and will soon offer doctors a real-time view of biological processes in the human brain. The MRI, called the 9.4 Tesla (9.4T), will allow physicians to observe metabolic processes in real...
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Smart Studying
Science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) courses often employ graphs, diagrams, and figures, putting students with visual disabilities at a significant disadvantage. The company Livescribe has created a smartpen and paper technology that aims to bring these subjects to life for blind students. Andy Van Schaack, a lecturer at...
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Tech Needs of the Week
Technology is required to enable real-time detection of defects during the welding process. This could be achieved by a system that monitors parameters during the welding process and then analyzes changes, ascertains the presence and location of a weld defect, and if possible, its nature. Potential solutions should be...
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Plug-In Power
The University of California-Davis has licensed a new plug-in hybrid vehicle technology to Efficient Drivetrains Inc. (EDI) of Palo Alto, CA. EDI was founded in 2006 to commercialize the technology brought about by decades of work by Andy Frank, professor of mechanical and aeronautical engineering at UC Davis. Unlike hybrid-electric...

Ask the Expert

John Chandler on Achieving Quality Motion Control
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FAULHABER MICROMO brings together the highest quality motion technologies and value-added services, together with global engineering, sourcing, and manufacturing, to deliver top quality micro motion solutions. With 34 years’ experience, John Chandler injects a key engineering perspective into all new projects and enjoys working closely with OEM customers to bring exciting new technologies to market.

Inside Story

Inside Story: Trends in Packaging and Sterilization
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Eurofins Medical Device Testing (MDT) provides a full scope of testing services. In this interview, Eurofins’ experts, Sunny Modi, PhD, Director of Package Testing; and Elizabeth Sydnor, Director of Microbiology; answer common questions on medical device packaging and sterilization.