The IoT is taking over the world, but it can no longer be satisfied with
mere terran domination. In a recent announcement, M2M developer Digi
International will aid the IoT’s mission and sent it into space to begin
colonizing the stars.
NASA will use Digi International’s XBee ZigBee modules as part of a
program to determine potential applications of wireless technologies in
space. The launch is scheduled to take place from NASA’s Wallops Flight
Facility in Virginia on July 7.
The NASA Sounding Rocket Program provides opportunities for
suborbital flight through the Flight Opportunities Program for early
flight evaluation of promising technology. The flight plan calls for the
Sub-Orbital Aerodynamic Re-entry Experiments (SOAREX) payload to be
delivered by a suborbital rocket to about 250 miles above the Earth.
This will test new “Exo-Brake” technology, which is a specially-designed
braking device that operates similar to a parachute at extremely high
speeds and low air pressures. This is a new de-orbit technique, and is
being considered a possible solution for returning cargo from the
International Space Station (ISS), orbiting platforms or as a possible
landing mechanism in low-density atmospheres. Like on Mars, for
instance.
As part of a five-node network, XBee ZigBee will be used to monitor
Exo-Brake performance data that encompass 3-axis acceleration
parameters, in addition to temperature and air pressure. Payload
avionics will relay the XBee data to ground control via an Iridium
satellite. The XBee modules will be used to create the wireless sensor
data network for the Exo-Brake and then transfer the data to the Iridium
uplink.
Typically, sensor devices collecting atmospheric readings are
connected with wiring, but as part of a “wireless-in-space” effort
conducted by the NASA Engineering and Safety Center, NASA is determining
if it can augment traditional wiring with wireless networking. A
wireless environment could present numerous advantages, including
creating vehicles and devices with less weight due to fewer cables
needed, resulting in a lower fuel requirement or greater payload
capacity.
“Wireless sensor technology allows measuring important parameters
such as aerodynamic pressure and temperature at the apex of the
Exo-Brake during re-entry,” said Rick Alena, computer engineer, NASA
Ames. “It is very difficult to instrument a deployable parachute like
the Exo-Brake, and wireless sensor modules provide the means for this
type of measurement where it is difficult to run wires.”
Rise of the machines, indeed.
(Iotevolutionworld.com)
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