NASA: May the Best Kids’ Code Win

http://go.bloomberg.com/political-capital/2013-01-10/nasa-may-the-best-kids-c…

Photograph by Commander DomInic Gorie/NASA

The International Space Station (ISS) over Miami, taken from the Space Shuttle Endeavour.

 

NASA plans to upload code developed by teens to control bowling ball-sized satellites aboard the International Space Station.

The off-the-wall experiment tomorrow is part of a contest sponsored by the elite Pentagon research unit known as the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

The software code was developed by teams of U.S. high school students as part of the fourth annual student robotics challenge, according to a NASA press release today.

The top 45 teams had their code sent last week to the space station, where an astronaut plans to command the satellites to run the teams’ flight programs.

The best-performing code wins.

In return, the winning team of students will receive certificates and a flight patch that was flown aboard the space station, according to the release.

NASA, MIT, DARPA HOST FOURTH ANNUAL STUDENT ROBOTIC CHALLENGE JAN. 11

 

 

 

 

 

 

Joshua Buck

Headquarters, Washington                                                                                                Jan. 10, 2013

202-358-1100

jbuck@nasa.gov

 

Sarah McDonnell

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.

617-253-8923

s_mcd@mit.edu

 

MEDIA ADVISORY: M13-012

 

NASA, MIT, DARPA HOST FOURTH ANNUAL STUDENT ROBOTIC CHALLENGE JAN. 11

 

WASHINGTON — NASA will join the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and high school student teams from the United States and abroad for the fourth annual Zero Robotics SPHERES Challenge Friday, Jan. 11. The event will take place on the MIT campus in Cambridge, Mass., and be broadcast live on NASA Television beginning at 8:30 a.m. EST.

 

For the competition, NASA will upload software developed by high school students onto Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, Reorient, Experimental Satellites (SPHERES), which are bowling ball-sized spherical satellites aboard the International Space Station. The top 45 teams from previous competitions had their code sent last week to the space station, where an astronaut will command the satellites to execute the teams’ flight program. During a simulated mission, the teams will complete a special challenge inspired by future satellite technologies, such as formation flight and close proximity operations.

 

Student finalists will be able to see their flight program live in the televised finals. The team with the highest software performance over several rounds of the competition will win the challenge. The winning team will receive certificates and a SPHERES flight patch that was flown aboard the space station.

 

News media wishing to cover this event must contact Sarah McDonnell at MIT at 617-253-8923 or s_mcd@mit.edu. NASA officials will be available to speak with news media after the competition.

 

In addition to their use in this competition, the SPHERES satellites are used inside the space station to conduct formation flight maneuvers for spacecraft guidance navigation, control and docking. The three separate satellites that make up SPHERES fly in formation inside the space station’s cabin. The satellites provide opportunities to test a wide range of hardware and software at an affordable cost.

 

NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., operates and maintains the SPHERES National Laboratory Facility on the station.

 

For more information about SPHERES, visit:

 

http://go.nasa.gov/SPHERES

 

For NASA TV schedule and video streaming information, visit:

 

http://www.nasa.gov/nasatv

 

For more about the Zero Robotics Program, visit:

 

http://go.nasa.gov/zero-robotics

 

For more information about the International Space Station, visit:

 

http://www.nasa.gov/station

 

-end-

 

MIT’S Technology Review Identifies 10 Technologies Set to Transform Our World

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/mits-technology-review-identifies-10-technol…

CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Apr 27, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) — The editors of MIT’s Technology Review have announced their annual list of the 10 emerging technologies with the greatest potential to transform our world. These innovations promise fundamental shifts in areas including energy, health care, computing, and communications. The ultimate criterion is straightforward: is the technology likely to change the world?

The changes that result from the technologies will take many different forms. For example, the TR10 features a new way to make solar cells that will boost renewable energy, plus a DNA sequencing technique that’s cheap enough and fast enough to make analyzing a patient’s genome a routine part of health care.

— Egg stem cells. Jonathan Tilly and Boston-based OvaScience have discovered a technique that could increase older women’s chances of having babies by tapping the rejuvenating potential of stem cells in their own ovaries.

— Ultra-efficient solar. Semprius, a startup based in Durham, North Carolina, has invented solar cells that could produce power more cheaply than fossil fuels by using tiny amounts of an efficient but expensive material called gallium arsenide.

— Light-field photography. In the biggest innovation in consumer cameras since the advent of digital photography, Lytro, of Mountain View, California, has developed one that allows photographers to focus a picture after it is taken.

— Solar microgrids. Four hundred million people in India don’t have access to electrical grids, typically relying on kerosene lamps to light their homes. Mera Gao Power of Reusa, India, has developed a low-cost village-scale solar-powered grid that can power lights and charge cell phones.

— 3-D transistors. Intel, headquartered in Santa Clara, California, has redesigned the transistor so it uses less space and electricity and can operate even faster, which will lead to smaller, more powerful, and more energy-efficient mobile devices.

— A faster Fourier transform. A team of researchers at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts, has created an upgraded version of a critical algorithm that underpins everything from how cell phones communicate to how digital music files are compressed. The result will be faster multimedia downloads and better ways to analyze and manage Internet traffic.

— Nanopore Sequencing. Oxford Nanopore, based in Oxford, U.K., squeezes DNA through microscopic pores in a membrane in order to quickly read a genetic sequence without expensive reagents. Oxford Nanopore’s machines could become part of a clinic’s standard collection of diagnostic tools, bringing in a new age of personalized medicine.

— Crowdfunding. New York City startup Kickstarter is changing the rules on how technologies can be commercialized. Its website lets members of the general public chip in to support projects they’d like to see come to fruition: a home wireless sensor system raised over $500,000, and a simplified 3-D printer garnered over $800,000.

— High-speed materials discovery. By inventing a way to combine and test thousands of substances so as to mimic how batteries are actually manufactured and used, San Diego–based Wildcat Discovery Technologies can rapidly zero in on materials that could dramatically improve the reliability of batteries and the amount of energy they can store.

— Facebook’s Timeline. The world’s biggest social network has created a way to persuade its 800 million monthly active users to give more meaning to the vast amounts of data the Menlo Park, California, company has about them. The result is a better experience for users–and better targeting for the advertisers who pay for the network.

The 2012 TR10 is featured in the May/June issue of Technology Review and is posted on the Web at http://www.technologyreview.com/TR10 .

Startup developing new battery technology wins $12,000 in first MIT ACCELERATE contest

http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2012/battery-technology-startup-wins-accelerate…

Sloan Fellow Vishwas Dindore and his SolidEnergy teammates won the $10,000 Daniel M. Lewis Grand Prize along with a $2,000 Audience Choice Award at the MIT ACCELERATE contest held recently at MIT.

SolidEnergy, a start-up that’s developing a battery technology to improve the safety and energy density of rechargeable batteries, walked away with the $12,000 after beating out 28 teams of semi-finalists during the inaugural MIT ACCELERATE contest, which was introduced this winter as part of the MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition — now in its 22nd year — as another channel to encourage entrepreneurs to turn their ideas into reality.

Participating teams submitted a demonstration, ranging from a hardware prototype to experimental data to a beta web service, to prove the concepts behind their business ideas. Judging was conducted by a panel of industry experts and venture capitalist judges.

“Huge markets, pioneering technology and a dynamic team … what more do you need?” asked ACCELERATE Judge Chris Gabrieli, a partner at Bessemer Venture Capital, on the judges’ selection of SolidEnergy.

SolidEnergy introduced a patented battery technology that has more than twice the energy density of a regular lithium-ion battery, and can safely operate from -40 degrees C to 250 degrees C. It is also the first rechargeable battery with the potential to be used in oil drilling. The battery technology also has potential applications for consumer electronics, electric vehicles, biomedical devices and the military.

Team members included Qichao Hu, a graduating PhD student at Harvard and co-inventor of the battery; Louis Beryl, a graduating student at Harvard Business School and Harvard Kennedy School; Mike Hagerty, a graduating master’s student in the MIT Technology and Policy Program; and Dindore, an MIT Sloan Fellow with experience in the oil and gas industry. Their adviser is MIT Professor Donald R. Sadoway, who is also co-inventor of the battery technology.

“We were blown away by the level of competition and impressed by the other pitches,” said Hagerty, who added that their win came from “combining a potentially groundbreaking technology with a realistic and exciting opportunity to move it to the market.”

Registration for the upcoming MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition will start next week and will end March 23.

For more information on the MIT ACCELERATE Contest, the 28 semi-finalists, and this year’s MIT $100K, visit the competition website.