Title: NASA SHARP CLOSING CEREMONY
1NASA SHARP CLOSING CEREMONY
2Combustion and Ignition of Energetic Nancomposites
- Harrison Hsu
- Under supervision of Dr. E. L. Dreizin and A.
Ermoline, New Jersey Institute of Technology
3Nanocomposites
- Mixtures blended on the scale of nanometers
- They are exceptionally homogeneous
A nanocomposite
A regular mixture
4More about Nanocomposites
- Produced by blending fine powders
- Powders manufactured in ball mill
- Nanocomposite powders can be pressed into
easier-to-handle pellets
Ball milling pictures from http//www.ilpi.com/ino
rganic/glassware/index.html
5Reactive Nanocomposites
- Nanocomposites have effectively infinite reaction
surface area - They react faster and more intensely than
macro-size composites
- Can be space propellant, explosive, incendiary
6The Laser Chamber
- A hermetically sealed chamber
- Equipped with CO2 and red lasers
- Data collection instruments light and sound
- Used to heat and ignite pellets
7(No Transcript)
8First Project Zirconium
- The phase chemistry of Zr with N and O is not
well-known - Research could lead to discovery of new
materials, particularly explosives and propellants
A diagram of the compositions used
9Current Results
- Local heating is currently possible
- Multiple heatings a promising possibility
- Compositions A, B, C, and E have been used so far
Sphere-and-cylinder formation for uniform heating
10Results (cont.)
SEM reveals morphologies
Dendritic
Spherical Inclusions
Burn temperatures about 2000K
11Graph
12Second Project Thermite
- A reactive metal exchanges oxygen with an inert
oxide for large energy release.
- Aluminum-Iron
- Aluminum-Molybdenum
- Boron-Titanium
Example Reaction AlFe2O3 Al2O3Fe
From http//www.chem.psu.edu/ncs/HalloweenShow2003
.htm
13Thermite Preparation
- Arrested Reactive Milling
- Milling cut short boosts reaction power and speed
- Used to compare with conventional milling
14Results
- Pulsed Detonation
- ARM releases more energy faster than the blend
- Frequent saturation of camera
15Future Research
- Added Variables
- Temporary levitation for ignitions
- Teflon nanocomposite (CF2) n Al)
- New Pellet Binders
- New formulations of Zr-O-N (D,F,G,H)
- Applications of Technology
- Munitions
- Propellant
- Fuel
16Analysis of Aerosol Particle Concentration Using
MFRSR
- Goddard Institute For Space Studies
- The City College Of New York, Department of
Electrical Engineering - Xavier Estevez
17What are aerosols?
- Air consists of molecules of N2, O2, CO2, and
various other gases - Aerosols are fine solid or liquid particles
suspended in a gas - Some examples of atmospheric aerosols are smoke,
sulfates, volcanic ash, pollen, mold spores
18Remote Sensing
- Is the observation of some attribute of a subject
by means that do not involve direct contact with
that subject - In other words, look dont touch
- A familiar remote sensing system is that of your
eyes and brain - Examples of remote sensing weather radar,
satellite imagery, climbing a mountain and
looking at things, LIDAR, seismometers,
telescopes, radio telescopes, x-rays, MRI. The
applications are almost endless.
19Remote Sensing of Aerosols
- In order to determine the concentration of
aerosols in the atmosphere, we use optical remote
sensing. - Aerosol particles reflect light. We can detect
these particles by measuring the loss of
intensity of light as it passes through an
aerosol-bearing medium - Different wavelengths of light can detect
different particle sizes. - Simply put, short wavelength light detects
smaller particles, and long wavelength light
detects larger particles
Long wavelength light
Short wavelength light
20What is the MFRSR?
- Multi-Filter Rotating Shadowband Radiometer
- Multi-Filter
- Senses several different wavelengths of light
- Rotating Shadowband
- Has a motorized arm thatperiodically covers the
sensor - Radiometer
- Measures intensity of solar radiation
http//www.yesinc.com/products/data/mfr7/index.htm
l
21How Is It Used?
MFR
Laptop
Control Unit / Data Acquisition System
RS-232
- Data Acquisition System (DAS) controls the MFR,
stores data in internal memory - Laptop is connected to the DAS to download the
data - Data files are analyzed using various software
tools
22What Does It Tell Us?
- The moving shadowband allows one instrument to
collect direct and diffuse intensity readings - Data analysis tells us how much light is
reflected by the atmosphere - Variations in this amount are related to
concentration of aerosol particles
23Beers Law
- The deeper the glass, the darker the brew,
- The less the amount of light that gets through
Ig I0 emt Loge Ig Loge I0 tm
- The intensity of the light that reaches the
earths surface is decreased by two factors the
length of its path through the atmosphere, and
the optical properties of the atmosphere - The relationship can be modeled as a linear
equation. - The slope of this line is equal to the total
optical depth (how effectively the atmosphere
blocks light)
24Langley Regression Analysis
- As the sun moves across the sky, sunlight must
pass through varying amounts of air - The lights path is shortest at noon, and longest
at sunrise and sunset - Beers law tells us that there is a direct
relationship between path length and light
intensity light that passes through a path twice
as long is affected twice as much. - We assume that the optical depth of the
atmosphere remains constant over a half-day
period, and can therefore determine optical depth
by plotting light intensity against path length
(the secant of the solar zenith angle).
25Data Filtering
The optical depth for the time period in this
graph is equal to the slope of the red line.
The red line was not drawn mathematically, it
just looks right This technique is not
statistically valid, we have to use a linear
regression equation to draw the trend line That
regression applied to this data set would yield a
line with a less severe slope and a lower
y-intercept, due to the disproportionate effect
of outlying points.
Secant of solar zenith angle vs. Solar radiation
intensity (W/m2/nm) 415 nm, afternoon of
22-June-2004
26Linear Regression
- Linear regression is a technique used to plot a
straight line from a 2-dimensional collection of
plotted data points - This allows one to model real-world data
theoretically - The line produced will pass as closely as
possible to as many of the data points as
possible - The equation which returns the slope of the
best-fit line is as follows
27Outcome
- The final product of my research is a list of
optical depths for approximately 70 days, and the
Java application that I used to calculate these
values. - I do not see any discernible patterns in these
optical depths. They do not appear to conform to
any linear or periodic functions as far as I can
tell. - One potential source of error is the fact that
due to cloudy or overcast conditions, some days
did not yield any acceptable data-points, or
yielded too few data-points to obtain any
statistically valid trend - Another error source is the fact that even the
best data-cleaning algorithm cannot determine
with absolute certainty which readings are
invalid.
28References
- Atmospheric Aerosols What are they, and why are
they so important? http//oea.larc.nasa.gov/PAIS
/Aerosols.html - Linear Regressionhttp//www.math.csusb.edu/facu
lty/stanton/probstat/regression.html - Excel Tutorial On Linear Regressionhttp//phoen
ix.phys.clemson.edu/tutorials/excel/regression.htm
l - Langley Methodhttp//www.optics.arizona.edu/rsg
/menu_items/resources/equip/langley.htm - MFR-7 MULTI-FILTER ROTATING SHADOW BAND
RADIOMETERhttp//www.yesinc.com/products/data/mf
r7/index.html
29Supercritical Fluid Assisted Particle Synthesis
- Antoinette Kretsch
- New Jersey Institute of Technology
30Supercritical Fluid Extraction
31Analytical Techniques
- Beckman Coulter N4 Plus Submicron Particle Size
Analyzer - determines particle size by measuring the rate of
change in laser light intensity scattered by
particles as they diffuse through a fluid - Leo 1530 VP SEM Microscope
- Produces 3-D image magnified x100,000 by spraying
specimen with fine metal coating and sending beam
of electrons over the surface to be projected
onto fluorescent screen - SigmaScan Systat software program
- Collects data such as diameter and area of
nanoparticles using pictures taken by the SEM - FTIR Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy
- Used to identify chemical bonds in various
substances by interpreting the infrared
absorption spectra
32Conclusions
- A smaller nozzle will yield smaller, less
agglomerated particles - A pressure closer to supercritical pressure (78
bar for CO2) will yield smaller particles, so 82
bar had smaller particles than 100 bar - The higher ratio of acetone to DCM will yield
smaller particles with a narrow size distribution
although the particles will have a distorted
shape
33Suggestions for Further Study
- Can a stronger pump be used for force the
solution through tinier micronozzles (ex 10 µm
and 5 µm)? - Is there a better way to increase yield of
particles (particles stick to sides of, top of,
and apparatus inside the collecting chamber and
are hard to remove) and decrease amount lost to
air? - What would the results be if another
supercritical fluid was used instead of CO2? - Can the durability of the micronozzles be
increased so they last more than one or two
trials?
34Skeletal Response to Weightlessness in the Female
Murine Tibia
- Amy Brazin, NASA Apprentice
- Maria Squire, Ph.D. Candidate
- Stefan Judex, Ph.D.
- August 20, 2004
35Effects of Disuse are Site-Specific
- Metaphyseal BV/TV is 30 lower in disuse mice
- Metaphyseal Ct.Ar is lower by 15?as a result of
a decrease in Ps.Ar and increase in Ec.Ar - Yet, diaphyseal Ct.Ar was only minimally affected
(3)?due to an insignificant increase in both
Ps.Ar and Ec.Ar
36If I had more time, I would.
- Analysis male F1 mice for similar effects in the
tibia - Examine the osteoclast, osteoblast, and osteoid
growth and population density in specific sites - Research other causes of bone loss such as
hormonal secretions
37Image Segmentation of Bone Density Images
38Quick Overview
- Trying to find a deconvlution algorithm that will
give us the real image. - g(x,y) f(x,y)h(x,y)n(x,y)
- We took a PSF (represents blur in a micro CT
scanner) and altered it 3 ways. - Deconvolved the images using each PSF and
analyzed the results
39Results
- Symmetrically rotated Gaussian PSF yielded the
best results - Circular PSF good too- not the best
40Future
- Create 3D volume estimates of the mouse bones
- Use pattern recognition to determine genetic
trends in mice with bone loss - Write a code to be implemented in a micro CT
scanner
41Acknowledgements
- Dr. John Daponte
- Megan Damon
- Michael Clark
- Thomas Sadowski
- Charles Tirrell
- NASA SHARP
- NASA GISS
- SCSU
42Enhancing Air Gap Membrane Distillation
- Melissa Deutsch
- In conjunction with the Goddard Institute for
Space Studies at the New Jersey Institute of
Technology - Dr. Chao Zhu professor of mechanical
engineering - Tong Lee, Qun Yu PhD candidates
- Summer 2004
43Research Findings
- Distillation system used to extract chemically
pure water from dirty water through a hydrophobic
membrane - Theoretically, pure water has a resistance of
infinity, since it cannot conduct electricity - This system produced water of 300kO resistance
from an initial source feed of salt water at 90kO
- Huge jump in resistance of water shows that the
system is largely effective in its end
- Found that the magnetic stirrer did little to
increase both the rate of water production and
the volume of water produced - Larger temperature difference did produce a
greater rate of production - Hot side cavity is too large to effectively
increase the rate of water production - Folded membrane would make the system more
feasible for use on a lunar base - Vacuum pump necessary to increase rate of flow
44Future Work
- Test the AGMD apparatus against various
concentrations of dissolved particles (ie NaCl,
dyes) - Test the AGMD apparatus against various
temperature gradients - Install an ultrasonic inducer to potentially
enhance the effectiveness of the membrane
distillation system - Build a new AGMD apparatus with a folded membrane
module to increase flow rate - Introduce a vacuum into the air gap
AGMD apparatus
45York College Radio Telescope
- York College Radio Telescope
- York College Observatory
- Ian OLeary
- Tim Paglione
46Description
- We will be receiving Radio waves from various
sources. - Radio waves we are focusing on is the 21 cm
hydrogen wave emissions. - Radio waves allow us to understand more about
what we are focusing on. - Hydrogen gives creates a 21 cm wave when it moves
from its excited state to its ground state.
47Project Goals
- Construction of a Radio Telescope.
- Connections between telescope and computer
(server). - Observe radio wave emissions from hydrogen
emitting sources. - ex Sun (stars), Moon, and Galaxies
- Record and plot all data found.
48Personal Air Vehicle
By Robert Brown and Nikhil Srivastava
Contributions from Dr. Siva Thangam
49This is an artist's concept of a dual-mode road
to air vehicle, a 'flying car.'
50A Flying CarWhat would it take?
- Concept
- A roadable aircraft that gives people the
option to drive or to fly - Why?
- Basically, a question of time
- Point to point mobility can be dramatically
increased with a dual-mode vehicle
51The Process
- Research Websites, Magazines, News Articles,
other published works - Comparison/rating of existing designs using
evaluation metrics - Preliminary conceptual design
- Testing of design using principles of fluid
dynamics - Building a prototype?
52Sample Metrics (Specifications)
- Ease/Speed of convertibility
- Fits on roads/parking spaces/garages
- Propulsion fuel efficiency, type of engine
- Size passenger capacity, cargo, fuel
- Takeoff/Landing runway length, noise
- Weight distribution
53Important Guidelines
- Fuel Sources Involved
- Emissions
- Noise issues
- Cost Analysis
- Surveys for user demographics
- Ground systems to support transportation
Nikhils design
54Radio Emission of Jupiter and the Sun
- NASA SHARP
- Goddard Institute for Space Studies
- Medgar Evers College
- By Junior Soto, Melissa Feliciano, Tiffany
Walker - Mentor Dr. Leon Johnson
55Results
- The general task that we perform was receiving
electromagnetic waves from the Sun. After
receiving the electromagnetic waves we had to
find out how this affected that Planet Earth. The
result that we received was that we heard two
solar bursts. We had to keep in mind that there
was a lot of interference at our site which is
located at Medgar Evers college. During the time
that we were receiving electromagnetic waves we
also were hearing a lot of static's.
56Future Work
- As we continue to gather more information on
Radio Jove and also gathering electromagnetic
waves from the Sun we came to the conclusion that
there should be further work on this experiment.
Such experiments includes listening for more
solar bursts near in the future and also
identifying how this emission from the Sun can
affect the communication on Earth. By doing all
of this we could come and find a way in which our
communication can be stronger and not be
disturbed, nor interrupted by any solar emission.
57Precision Robot Navigation
- Configuring a PS2 optical mouse to interface with
a BASIC Stamp 2 microcontroller
Summer 2004
Our Robot
Researchers Calley Levine and Ali
Moussawi Mentor Professor Vikram Kapila Teaching
Assistant Mr. Mishah Salman
58Our Project
- The precision navigation robot was created in
order to provide a cheap and practical method for
determining the position of a robot. - This was done using a PS/2 optical mouse and
- the BASIC Stamp 2 (BS2) microcontroller
- Difficulty Interfacing communication between the
mouse and the BS2 - Many attempts were made to write a program which
would successfully enable the communication
simply said, we failed - Factors timing, power, and data transfer
- Instead, the PAK-Via pic was used and its
displacement readings were then applied in order
to restrict the movement of the robot to an area
inscribed by specified parameters (i.e. a room)
59What We Learned
- Circuitry (basics use of transistors
integration of sensors, processors, actuators,
etc.) - Computer programming using PBASIC language
- Responsibilities of employment the work wasnt
too bad - Managing time and keeping to deadlines is
extremely important - (AIM, Minesweeper, and Microsoft Paint are
destructive forces!!!)
60Advanced Composition Explorer
- Measuring the Solar Wind and Solar Flares
Oscar Puente Mentor Dr. Paul Marchese
61Research Findings
- The solar wind contains more low energy particles
than it does those of higher energies - These particles can escape the suns gravity more
easily - They require less energy to be excited and shot
away from the sun - Electrons are more abundant in the solar wind
than protons, and they travel more quickly - Electrons weigh less than protons and therefore
require less energy to enter the solar wind - Elements of higher weights (He, O, Fe) are only
present in the solar wind during times of great
solar activity - They weigh more than H ions and electrons
62Future Work
- Compare solar wind data from ACE to
magnestosphere/ionoshphre data from the Earth - Find out how the solar wind affects the earths
magnetic fields - Find predictable patterns in changes caused by
the solar wind
63EPR(electron paramagnetic resonance)
- Jonathan Spagnola
- Dr. Flowers, Hunter college/MEC
64EPR Theory
- Electrons have two spin energy states
- When no magnetic-field, the energy of the spin
states are identical - In presence of magnetic field, the energy of spin
states diverge - EPR is only used on paramagnetic species
65EPR spectroscopy
- The instrument used in the lab is Bruker EMX
model spectrometer. - The frequency of the microwaves that the
spectrometer produce is 9.5GHz. - EPR spectrum of LiMn2O4
66EPR Practicality
- The spectrometer can also be used to test the
efficiency of different combinations of atoms,
such as Li-ion batteries. - The batteries for the mars rover were developed
by those in the lab I currently work in. - So, why Lithium.Lithium ion batteries are one of
the most common rechargeable sources of energy.
67High Pressure NMR Study of Proton Movement in a
Polymer
- BY Rahsaan Bascombe
- Mentor Professor Steve Greenbaum, Eugene Mananga
68What I Learned
- Some Science behind NMR technology
- 2)How to run an experiment varying different
Parameters - 3) How to Use Mat lab to graph my data
- 4))Not all work done in Lab is Nobel Prize
worthy.
69Results
70Further Work
- Running another polymer under the same conditions
- 2) Finding the diffusion under each pressure
- 3) Comparing it to the coefficients found in the
BB2 sample - 4)Determining which would be better to use in a
Fuel Cell
71The Great Dark Vortex on Jupiter
- Harry Charalambous
- Dr. James Frost
72Introduction
- The Great Dark Spot of Jupiter is a mysterious
anomaly that occurs in the north pole of Jupiter
at a latitude of 60 degrees and a longitude of
180 degrees. It is located in the same vicinity
as the Aurora, which suggests the dark spot is
related to the Aurora. With a size three times
the size of Earth, roughly the size of the Great
Red Spot, and a lifespan of only approximately
ten weeks, the Great Dark Spot is a mystery. The
Great Dark Vortex was first discovered by
accident by the Hubble Space Telescope in 1997.
Scientists at NASA did not know what to make of
the spot until it was once again seen during the
CASSINI fly-by of Jupiter in 2000.
73Abstract
- Our study of the Great Dark Vortex on Jupiter is
meant to discover how and why the vortex forms
and what factors contribute to its formation.
The Great Dark Vortex, also known as the Great
Dark Spot is currently under investigation for
its peculiar formation and deterioration. The
three dates I am studying are on September 1997
with the dark spot clearly visible, November 1997
with signs of the deterioration of the Great Dark
Spot and its trail, and on August 1999 with no
sign of the Great Dark Spot. This information is
gathered using the Hubble Space Telescope.
74Conclusion
- The Great Dark Spot can be seen clearly as it was
supposed to be during September 1997 under
filters of 218nm, 255nm, 336nm, and 890nm. These
are not new results, but they are worth
discovering for myself. - Ratios under an assortment of filters further
reveal the Dark Spot and its trail during
September 1997, and its deterioration during
November 1997 in the north pole of Jupiter under
a CML of roughly 180 degrees. - The deterioration of the Great Dark Spot is
revealed in some of the ratio plots from November
1997. The possible remnants of the Great Dark
Spot may be involved in the reformation of the
Great Dark Spot as shown with the CASSINI flyby
of Jupiter.
75Conclusion (contd)
- Thus, in the future, we may be able to use the
remnants of the dark spot to tell us the
composition of the spot. It also suggests that
the Great Dark Spot again and possibly
periodically. - A ratio of 336/218 during September 1997 seems to
reveal another dark spot in the south pole of
Jupiter. This spot is of similar nature to the
Great Dark Spot because it is located in the
Aurora and last for approximately the same amount
of time. Therefore, the Great Dark Spot can be
inferred to be directly related to the Aurora. - A comparison of point values at the Great Dark
Spot for different frequencies suggests that the
Great Dark Spots composition has a spectrum near
a frequency of 410nm.
76Gil Zamfirescu, in conjunction with Dr. Leonard
Druyan, Dr. Matthew Fulakeza, and Abdelrahim
Mansour
Everybody talks about the weather, but nobody
does anything about it
High-resolution Weather Analysis and Prediction
West Africa
771) The resolution of the Regional Model.
Why do we think we can do better?
Satellite Imagery (TRMM)
How do we collect data?
NCEP/NCAR Reanalysis
The Regional Model
2) The algorithm used by the Regional Model to
simulate precipitation.
78(No Transcript)
79Detail of storm patterns. Variability of data.
80(No Transcript)
81Optics
- The All-Optical Threshold Device
Stephen Brandes, NASA Apprentice Dr. Roger
Dorsinville, Mentor Muhammad Ali Ummy, Graduate
Student
The City College of New York
82All-Optical Threshold Device
- A device that can discriminate between two
intensity levels is a Threshold Device
- Loop mirror contains SOA, attenuator, and 5050
coupler - Phase change occurs in clockwise beam during
transmission in 5050 coupler - Destructive or constructive interference at the
ports - To set a threshold value, attenuator is set to
constant value while SOA is varied
83Experimental Setup
84Graphical Results
85Experimentation and Results
- SOA set to three different gain levels
- VOA varied periodically to change input intensity
- Threshold values of all-optical threshold device
were inversely proportional to the value of the
SOA - In future, threshold device can be used for
optical computing - Faster
- More efficient
86Nanoscale Cr4 Doped Olivine Crystallites Used In
Optical Amplifiers and Lasers
- By Denise Asafu-Adjei (Bronx H.S. of Science)
- Caesar Pereira (Archbishop Stepinac H.S.)
- Supervising Scientist Prof. Petricevic (CCNY)
- Senior Scientist Dr. Bykov (CCNY)
87Analysis of Cr doped Powders
- 0.1 and 0.5 samples seem to be the optimal
concentrations for laser emissions. - When heated to 1050?C in general, the light
emissions increased and encompassed a longer
range of wavelengths. - In conclusion, we can see that because the light
emissions for 1050?C surpassed 1000nm, Cr4 ions
are present now in our powders.
88Importance of this Research
- To synthesize an effective amplifying medium for
the purpose of creating a tunable laser that
will be able to emit light at multiple
wavelengths - This is of significance for NASA research because
these lasers would be more versatile, spatially
efficient, convenient, and cost-effective
89Applications of Lasers
- Optical communication
- Remote sensing
- Medical imaging
- Surgery and LASIK
- Tissue welding
90FURTHER RESEARCH
- Studying the light emissions from the crystals
synthesized from the powders - Attaining the optimal Cr concentration in the
crystals, which will provide the maximum light
emissions - In this final part of our project x-ray
spectroscopy will be utilized for further
analysis of our crystals that will be grown
91Classification of NYC Aerosols by X-Ray and
Optical Methods
- By John Sangobowale (Mount St. Michael Academy)
and William Dennis ( John F. Kennedy H.S.) - Mentors Marc Cesaire (Graduate student) and
Dr. Elizabeth Rudolph
- EAS Department CCNY
92Purpose
- The Principal objective of our work is
- Elemental Characterization of Aerosols collected
by two methods for comparison - EBAM beta mass attenuation
- Millipore apparatus Vacuum Filtration
- Ultimately to understand how weather patterns
affect the chemical composition and darkness of
aerosol particles
93What are Aerosols?
- Aerosols are small solid or liquid
particles suspended in the atmosphere. Their
sizes vary from a few nanometers (0.000000001
meters) to almost 100 micrometers (0.0001 m, the
thickness of a hair. - Volcanic dust
- Combustion products
- Soot
- Smoke
94Optical Microscopy
- Why do we use optical microscopy?
- New approach at characterizing aerosol samples
- Build upon other experimental work and correlate
with XRF techniques and (later down the
roadweather data) - Nikon Fluorescence Microscope with CCD Camera
95Conclusion
- Titanium and Iron are present in aerosols in
variable and sometimes high concentrations - At first pass, optical darkness of filters
correlates with weather characteristics
suggesting that high humidity and rain events
correlate with higher concentrations of metals
96Thanks To..