240,147 research outputs found

    Space Station alpha joint bearing

    Get PDF
    Perhaps the most critical structural system aboard the Space Station is the Solar Alpha Rotary Joint which helps align the power generation system with the sun. The joint must provide structural support and controlled rotation to the outboard transverse booms as well as power and data transfer across the joint. The Solar Alpha Rotary Joint is composed of two transition sections and an integral, large diameter bearing. Alpha joint bearing design presents a particularly interesting problem because of its large size and need for high reliability, stiffness, and on orbit maintability. The discrete roller bearing developed is a novel refinement to cam follower technology. It offers thermal compensation and ease of on-orbit maintenance that are not found in conventional rolling element bearings. How the bearing design evolved is summarized. Driving requirements are reviewed, alternative concepts assessed, and the selected design is described

    Electrical fault management orientated design of future electrical propulsion aircraft

    Get PDF
    Electrical propulsion aircraft (EPA) have been cited as the future of aviation, enabling greener, quieter, more efficient aircraft. However, due to the stringent requirements surrounding aircraft certification, these novel EPA concepts will need to demonstrate high levels of safety and reliability if electrified flight is ever to become a mainstream mode of passenger transportation. Therefore, robust electrical fault management (FM) is necessary to maintain critical levels of aircraft thrust and to enable high confidence in the reliability and safety of future EPA designs. To date, electrical FM for EPA has been done at a first-pass, minimal level or not at all. For electrical FM to be effective, it must be integrated into the aircraft design from an early stage. This dictates that a novel approach to the design of electrical architectures for EPA is required which addresses the current uncertainty in the availability of suitable FM technologies for future EPA electrical architectures. Therefore, a first-of-kind FM strategy map is presented which identifies projections on the progression of key areas of future EPA-specific FM technology development and acts as a pre-cursor to future FM technology roadmaps. Furthermore, the FM orientated early-stage electrical architecture design methodology presented in this thesis derives feasible, FM-capable electrical architectures for a given EPA concept and captures significant assumptions which impact the down selection process. Since any novel EPA electrical architecture will require some form of testing in hardware, a novel framework for strategic FM demonstrator development is then proposed and the FM test goals for different levels of demonstrator are identified. This strategic development of critical aspects of FM and early integration of FM requires a portfolio of FM demonstrators and test beds for EPA and is crucial if unproven, future EPA electrical architectures are to reach high confidence.Electrical propulsion aircraft (EPA) have been cited as the future of aviation, enabling greener, quieter, more efficient aircraft. However, due to the stringent requirements surrounding aircraft certification, these novel EPA concepts will need to demonstrate high levels of safety and reliability if electrified flight is ever to become a mainstream mode of passenger transportation. Therefore, robust electrical fault management (FM) is necessary to maintain critical levels of aircraft thrust and to enable high confidence in the reliability and safety of future EPA designs. To date, electrical FM for EPA has been done at a first-pass, minimal level or not at all. For electrical FM to be effective, it must be integrated into the aircraft design from an early stage. This dictates that a novel approach to the design of electrical architectures for EPA is required which addresses the current uncertainty in the availability of suitable FM technologies for future EPA electrical architectures. Therefore, a first-of-kind FM strategy map is presented which identifies projections on the progression of key areas of future EPA-specific FM technology development and acts as a pre-cursor to future FM technology roadmaps. Furthermore, the FM orientated early-stage electrical architecture design methodology presented in this thesis derives feasible, FM-capable electrical architectures for a given EPA concept and captures significant assumptions which impact the down selection process. Since any novel EPA electrical architecture will require some form of testing in hardware, a novel framework for strategic FM demonstrator development is then proposed and the FM test goals for different levels of demonstrator are identified. This strategic development of critical aspects of FM and early integration of FM requires a portfolio of FM demonstrators and test beds for EPA and is crucial if unproven, future EPA electrical architectures are to reach high confidence

    Innovative Long Wavelength Infrared Detector Workshop Proceedings

    Get PDF
    The focus of the workshop was on innovative long wavelength (lambda less than 17 microns) infrared (LWIR) detectors with the potential of meeting future NASA and DoD long-duration space application needs. Requirements are for focal plane arrays which operate near 65K using active refrigeration with mission lifetimes of five to ten years. The workshop addressed innovative concepts, new material systems, novel device physics, and current progress in relation to benchmark technology. It also provided a forum for discussion of performance characterization, producibility, reliability, and fundamental limitations of device physics. It covered the status of the incumbent HgCdTe technology, which shows encouraging progress towards LWIR arrays, and provided a snapshot of research and development in several new contender technologies

    Analyzing collaborative learning processes automatically

    Get PDF
    In this article we describe the emerging area of text classification research focused on the problem of collaborative learning process analysis both from a broad perspective and more specifically in terms of a publicly available tool set called TagHelper tools. Analyzing the variety of pedagogically valuable facets of learners’ interactions is a time consuming and effortful process. Improving automated analyses of such highly valued processes of collaborative learning by adapting and applying recent text classification technologies would make it a less arduous task to obtain insights from corpus data. This endeavor also holds the potential for enabling substantially improved on-line instruction both by providing teachers and facilitators with reports about the groups they are moderating and by triggering context sensitive collaborative learning support on an as-needed basis. In this article, we report on an interdisciplinary research project, which has been investigating the effectiveness of applying text classification technology to a large CSCL corpus that has been analyzed by human coders using a theory-based multidimensional coding scheme. We report promising results and include an in-depth discussion of important issues such as reliability, validity, and efficiency that should be considered when deciding on the appropriateness of adopting a new technology such as TagHelper tools. One major technical contribution of this work is a demonstration that an important piece of the work towards making text classification technology effective for this purpose is designing and building linguistic pattern detectors, otherwise known as features, that can be extracted reliably from texts and that have high predictive power for the categories of discourse actions that the CSCL community is interested in

    Foggy clouds and cloudy fogs: a real need for coordinated management of fog-to-cloud computing systems

    Get PDF
    The recent advances in cloud services technology are fueling a plethora of information technology innovation, including networking, storage, and computing. Today, various flavors have evolved of IoT, cloud computing, and so-called fog computing, a concept referring to capabilities of edge devices and users' clients to compute, store, and exchange data among each other and with the cloud. Although the rapid pace of this evolution was not easily foreseeable, today each piece of it facilitates and enables the deployment of what we commonly refer to as a smart scenario, including smart cities, smart transportation, and smart homes. As most current cloud, fog, and network services run simultaneously in each scenario, we observe that we are at the dawn of what may be the next big step in the cloud computing and networking evolution, whereby services might be executed at the network edge, both in parallel and in a coordinated fashion, as well as supported by the unstoppable technology evolution. As edge devices become richer in functionality and smarter, embedding capacities such as storage or processing, as well as new functionalities, such as decision making, data collection, forwarding, and sharing, a real need is emerging for coordinated management of fog-to-cloud (F2C) computing systems. This article introduces a layered F2C architecture, its benefits and strengths, as well as the arising open and research challenges, making the case for the real need for their coordinated management. Our architecture, the illustrative use case presented, and a comparative performance analysis, albeit conceptual, all clearly show the way forward toward a new IoT scenario with a set of existing and unforeseen services provided on highly distributed and dynamic compute, storage, and networking resources, bringing together heterogeneous and commodity edge devices, emerging fogs, as well as conventional clouds.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    MISAT: Designing a Series of Powerful Small Satellites Based upon Micro Systems Technology

    Get PDF
    MISAT is a research and development cluster which will create a small satellite platform based on Micro Systems Technology (MST) aiming at innovative space as well as terrestrial applications. MISAT is part of the Dutch MicroNed program which has established a microsystems infrastructure to fully exploit the MST knowledge chain involving public and industrial partners alike. The cluster covers MST-related developments for the spacecraft bus and payload, as well as the satellite architecture. Particular emphasis is given to distributed systems in space to fully exploit the potential of miniaturization for future mission concepts. Examples of current developments are wireless sensor and actuator networks with plug and play characteristics, autonomous digital Sun sensors, re-configurable radio front ends with minimum power consumption, or micro-machined electrostatic accelerometer and gradiometer system for scientific research in fundamental physics as well as geophysics. As a result of MISAT, a first nano-satellite will be launched in 2007 to demonstrate the next generation of Sun sensors, power subsystems and satellite architecture technology. Rapid access to in-orbit technology demonstration and verification will be provided by a series of small satellites. This will include a formation flying mission, which will increasingly rely on MISAT technology to improve functionality and reduce size, mass and power for advanced technology demonstration and novel scientific applications.
    corecore