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Past
Projects
2004
Graded
Coatings - June
03, 2004
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) has
developed and patented a novel method of forming coated
parts using functional, gradient-coating techniques.
The method is being used by NASA to form liners for
rocket engine combustion chambers. It extends the life
of the liners by eliminating blistering and separation
of the coating that can occur under high heat loads.
more...
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| 2003
Hidden
Identification on Parts: Magnetic Machine-Readable Matrix
Symbols - November
11, 2003
Have you ever seen a piece of space flight hardware?
When you do you will notice some letters and numbers
etched or inscribed on it. All NASA parts have an identity,
usually expressed in terms of part number, serial number,
etc. In most cases this identity is permanently marked
directly on the part for tracking throughout its lifecycle.
The recently approved NASA Technical Standard 6002A
and Handbook 6003A (found at http://standards.nasa.gov)
added the matrix symbol to the identification scheme
as shown in Figure A. This put a checkerboard bar code
on the part so an optical scanner could read it. The
intent was to make tracking parts as easy as checking
out at the grocery store. And the system works great
as long as the matrix symbol is visible.
more...
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| 2002
eNTRe
- May 14, 2002
You may be surprised to know that
every year a number of innovations at Marshall are patented
and commercialized. Some of these inventions have even
been incorporated into common items we use everyday.
Software
of the Year - January 01, 2002
When engineers at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
(MSFC) in Huntsville, Alabama couldn't find software
to meet their needs in analyzing rocket engine fluid
flow they invented it. As requirements changed and needs
evolved, so did the software.
Friction
Stir Welding Technology - January 10, 2002
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center proudly announces
the successful commercialization of its retractable
pin tool for friction stir welding (FSW) by MTS Systems
Corporation and MCE Technologies, Inc. Under license
from NASA, both companies recently introduced products
that use NASA Marshall's retractable pin tool for FSW
process improvements
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2001
Innovative
Solution to Video Enhancement - October 31, 2001
Video observation systems have become common fixtures
in our everyday lives. Cameras mounted obscurely on
walls, ceilings, and even traffic lights capture the
average person on videotape eight times a day.
NASA
Space Technology Shines New Light On Healing
- January 4, 2001
Doctors at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee
have discovered the healing power of light with the
help of technology developed for NASA's Space Shuttle.
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2000
Marshall-Developed
Knee Brace Featured At White House
Observance - October 26, 2000
Marshall Center's selectively lockable knee brace technology
was one of 15 technologies featured at a recent White
House observance.
New
Tanks/Pipes Handle Aggressive Fluids with Less Weight
A NASA Technology to Improve your Bottom Line -
October 4, 2000
Cryogenics, caustics, and corrosives "some of the
most difficult materials to manage" may have met
their match in a new technology developed by NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center.
Companies
License NASA VISAR Technology - September 13,
2000
The Video Image Stabilization and Registration (VISAR)
technology, used by the FBI and other law enforcement
officials to help solve crime, has expanded its capabilities
to the commercial sector.
Space
Act Helps Students Blast Off - August 16, 2000
High school students recently launched a rocket 35,106
feet into the air with help from Marshall Space Flight
Center.
Marshall's
VISAR Has Many Applications - January 26, 2000
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center announced in the Federal
Register that NASA intends to license its new state-of-the-art
video processing method for hardware applications.
Thermal
Gasket Developed At Marshall - January 1, 2000
Marshall Space Flight Center seeks qualified companies
to further develop and commercialize a new gasket technology.
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| 1999
NASA
Agreement Aids In Landmine Removal - December
1, 1999
An agreement between Thiokol Propulsion, Science and
Engineering Division in Brigham City, Utah, and Marshall
Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL. has produced a
more effective way to detonate landmines.
A
Safer Way To Bring Babies Into The World - November
5, 1999
Composite materials and fiber optic sensing technology
has been incorporated into a new and improved forceps,
making infant's entry into life a little bit easier.
Technology
Transfer Office Connects With Pennsylvania Company
- June 2, 1999
The Technology Transfer Office has signed a non-exclusive
license with M&A Screw and Machine Works of Philadelphia,
for Marshall's Quick Connect Fastener.
NASA
Scientists Aid Law Enforcement With New Software Technology
To Improve Video Quality - May 4, 1999
Watch out, America's most wanted. NASA scientists have
invented promising, new software technology to help
law enforcement agencies catch criminals by improving
the analysis of crime scene video.
Technology
Transfer Takes Technology On The Road
Marshall's Technology Transfer, Microgravity, and
Space Transportation Offices showcased the Center's
technology efforts in the National Manufacturing Week
Conference and trades show in Chicago, Ill.
Caught
On Tape - January 25, 1999
Marshall Space Flight Center technology may soon be
helping law enforcement officials around the country
solve crimes with Video Image Stabilization and Registration
(VISAR), a new concept in clear video imagery.
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| 1998
NASA,
College To Explore Virtual Reality Technologies
- October 9, 1998
A Space Act Agreement signed between NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and Calhoun
Community College in Decatur, Ala., establishes a cooperative
effort to examine emerging technologies in the area
of virtual reality.
Brigham
Young Students And NASA Engineers Work Together To Test
Student-Developed Solar Telescope - November
16, 1998
More than a decade of effort by over 200 students from
Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, culminated
this summer as students worked with NASA engineers at
the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.,
to prove their solar telescope worked.
NASA
Teams With Brigham Young University Students To Study
Solar Flares - August 27, 1998
Engineers at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)
in Huntsville, Ala., have teamed up with students and
faculty at Brigham Young University (BYU) in Provo,
Utah, to test an inexpensive telescope to study x-ray
emissions from the sun.
NASA
Research Helps Map Protein Structures, Key To The Development
of New Disease-Fighting Drugs - August 7, 1998
Research sponsored by NASA's Microgravity Research Program
at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.,
is making significant contributions to scientists' understanding
of the molecular structure of living things - a key
to the development of new disease-fighting drugs.
Sacramento
School Kids And NASA Technology Find California Capital's
Hot Spots. - July 23, 1998
NASA scientists teamed up with local school kids June
29th to answer these questions - literally - when they
took the city's "temperature."
Marshall
Center A Partner In High-Tech Business Incubator
- July 15, 1998
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) has teamed
with the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA), the State
of Alabama Department of Economic and Community Development
(ADECA), and the City of Huntsville, Ala., to establish
"BizTech," the Business Technology Development Center
for Huntsville and Madison County.
Space
Grown Insulin Crystals Provide New Data On Diabetes
- July 9, 1998
Diabetic patients may someday reduce their insulin injections
and lead more normal lives because of new insights gained
through innovative space research in which the largest
insulin crystals ever studied were grown on the Space
Shuttle.
Artificial
Intelligence Employed In Searching For Extraterrestrial
Organisms And Designing New Pharmaceuticals - July
2, 1998
Looks may not be everything, but they may indicate whether
something was alive - here, or on Mars.
Environmentally
Friendly Refrigeration System Developed For NASA Has
Commercial Applications. - June 25, 1998
A new, environmentally friendly refrigeration system,
developed for NASA to use aboard its Space Shuttles
and International Space Station, is finding applications
here on earth.
NASA
Signs Licensing Agreement With New Jersey Firm For Further
Development Of Energy-Saving Device. - June 11,
1998
The term "power factor controller" is not exactly a
household phrase. But the device itself is at work in
countless homes and businesses - quietly saving electrical
energy.
NASA
Tests Innovative Bioremediation Technique For Oil Spills.
- June 4, 1998
An Alabama hair dresser's flash of inspiration, supported
by tests by NASA, may hold the key to future oil spill
clean-ups.
Marshall
Center Ready To Meet International Quality Standards,
Say ISO 9001 Auditors - May 28, 1998
Carolyn Griner, acting director of NASA's Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., announced March 2
that the center will be recommended for certification
in ISO 9001.
Virtual
Reality Software Developed For The International Space
Station Comes Down To Earth - May 21, 1998
Virtual reality software developed for the International
Space Station comes down to earth. Open Worlds™,
a virtual reality software package developed to support
NASA's work on the International Space Station, is opening
new worlds of opportunity for businesses here on earth.
Space
Code Solves Industries' Identity Crisis - May
14, 1998
Digital data matrix technologies developed at NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, AL., to
identify the millions of parts that comprise Space Shuttles
such as the "Endeavour" are helping to launch
a new commercial endeavor.
Arkansas
Orthotics Firm Licensed To Manufacture NASA-Designed
Knee Brace For Stroke Victims - May 7, 1998
Horton's Orthotic Lab., Inc., of Little Rock, Ark.,
has signed a licensing agreement with NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, AL., to manufacture
an innovative knee brace. This new brace is designed
to offer freedom of movement to patients suffering from
a wide variety of lower extremity weaknesses.
MSFC
Engineer Cited For Technology Development - May
1, 1998
Fred Schramm, an engineer in the Technology Transfer
Office at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,
AL., was presented the Federal Laboratory Consortium
(FLC) Southeast Region Award of Excellence Oct. 28,
1997.
SPACE
Research Shines A light on Tumors To Save Lives
- April 23, 1998
Special lighting technology developed for NASA's commercial
plant growth experiments in space may soon help treat
cancer and save lives on Earth. For more information,
please visit http://www.mcw.edu/whelan.
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| 1997
Virtual
Reality Laboratory Dedication - June 1997
A new, cutting-edge, virtual reality laboratory -- created
as a joint venture by the Marshall Space Flight Center
and the Army Missile Command in Huntsville, Ala. --
was dedicated on Monday, June 2, 1997, at the Army-NASA
Virtual Innovations Laboratory (ANVIL), Building 4663,
at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala..
Insulation
From Space Program Hits The Road - August 1997
The same insulating material that's enabling instruments
aboard the Hubble Space Telescope to see to the ends
of the universe may soon help a pair of race car drivers
be the first to see the checkered flag.
NASA,
USBI Technology Hits The Roof - August 1997
The Convergent Spray Technologies™ (CST™)
spray process, developed by USBI Co. and used by NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), both located in
Huntsville, Ala., to apply heat-resistant coatings to
the Space Shuttle's Solid Rocket Boosters, has been
found to be suitable for yet another down-to-earth application
- that of applying a new coating to the metal roofs
of buildings.
Memory
Metals Finding Their Way Into Golf Clubs, Helicopters,
Operating Rooms, Bath Tubs And Factories - May
1997
Memory metal alloys developed by NASA's Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., for the international
Space Station are finding a host of applications down
on earth - from golf courses to bathrooms to factories.
Getting
Needled Less Of A Problem Thanks To NASA Technology
- May 1997
Anyone who's ever winced in pain as a nurse with a needle
tried to find a vein in which to start an intravenous
flow or draw a blood sample will really appreciate NASA's
latest technological breakthrough.
NASA
Technology That Helped "Eagle" Land On The Moon is Helping
Golfers Make "Eagles" On Earth - May 1997
In the 1960's, former NASA rocket scientist Ben Huang
was among the thousands at NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center in Huntsville, Ala., who worked on the Saturn
V moon rocket program. Today, he's an entrepreneur -
incorporating technologies that helped Apollo 11 astronauts
land "Eagle" on the moon into improved clubs that help
golfers reach their favorite par 4 greens on the first
shot and putt out with the next, carding "eagles" (two
under par) as their score.
NASA
"Smart Bolts" Likely To Revolutionize Some Industries
- May 1997
The world's first high-temperature resistant "intelligent"
fastener is on the market, thanks to a partnership between
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.,
and Ultrafast, Inc., of Malvern, Pa.
NASA
Technology Puts $ilver Lining In Storm Clouds For Former
Broadcast Meteorologist - May 1997
A lightning detection and location technology developed
at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.,
in the 1980's is paying big dividends for a former Huntsville
television station's meteorologist.
NASA
Technology Putting A New Twist On Early Detection Of
"Twisters" - April 1997 Release
Just as NASA research during the Apollo program led
to the development of home smoke alarms, research into
vibrations on the Space Shuttle now promises to provide
a tornado warning system to homes and communities.
NASA
Waterjet Stripping Technology Is Helping Vessels To
Stay Ship Shape - April 1997 Release
Technologies derived from America's space program are
helping the nation's ship repair and overhaul industry.
Space
Technologies A Hot Topic For National Fire Protection
Association - April 1997 Release
HUNTSVILLE, AL. - NASA, represented by the Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and the National
Fire Protection Association (NFPA) in Quincy, Mass.,
have signed an agreement to transfer technologies derived
from the space program to achieve greater safety for
firefighters and the public.
NASA
Computer Imaging Technology Is Helping Commercial Firm
See New Jobs And More Profits - April 1997 Release
Bio Imaging Research, Inc., of Lincolnshire, Ill., is
seeing new employees in its plant and more profits at
the end of the year, all thanks to their commercializing
computer imaging technologies developed for NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.
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| Other
Dates
Maytag
And NASA Team Up To Do The Dishes
Maytag's famous lonely repairman is likely to stay that
way, at least if NASA has anything to say about it.
NASA,
USBI Engineers Turn Into Roads Scholars
A process developed by NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center (MSFC) and United Technologies' USBI to apply
heat-resistant coatings to the Space Shuttle's Solid
Rocket Boosters is finding a new use. It has been successfully
used to apply a new, skid-resistant surface to an interstate
highway bridge south of Huntsville, Ala.
Space
Shuttle Engine Technology Research Benefits American
Jet Engine Manufacturer
NASA Space Shuttle technology is paying big dividends
for one of the nation's largest manufacturers of jet
engines for aircraft, Pratt & Whitney of East Hartford,
Conn.
NASA
Technology Targets Mosquitos
NASA engineers at the Marshall Space Flight Center
(MSFC) in Huntsville, Ala., have teamed up with an Arkansas
inventor to take aim on one of summertime's greatest
pests - the mosquito.
NASA
And Tennessee Reaffirm Technology Transfer Partnership
- August 16, 1996
HUNTSVILLE, AL. - Representatives of Tennessee Governor
Donald Sundquist and Marshall Space Flight Center Director
Dr. Wayne Littles met here today to reinitiate a memorandum
of understanding between NASA and the State of Tennessee
which facilitates the transfer of space program-derived
technologies to businesses, academic institutions and
entrepreneurs in the state.
NASA
Technology Helps American Horses Get A Jump On Their
Competition
While still ensuring America's Space Shuttles liftoff
and land safely, NASA technology also will be at work
helping a pair of the United States Equestrian Team's
(USET) premiere jumping horses do the same at the 1996
World Cup show jumping class this December in Switzerland.
Space
Technology Helps Louisiana Packaging Firm
A technology developed for the nation's space program
by Rockwell International Corp.'s Rocketdyne Division
in Canoga Park, Calif., is finding a down-to-earth application
with a packaging equipment manufacturer in Monroe, La.
NASA
Scientists Gain Insight Into Deadly Disease
Scientists at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
in Huntsville, AL, have taken an important step in understanding
the molecular structure of a disease that afflicts 200
to 300 million people and is second only to malaria
in cause of death worldwide. The disease, known as Schistosomiasis,
is caused by parasites found in contaminated water.
The
Eyes Have It
An ocular screening system developed at NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., is helping
to detect vision abnormalities and diseases, some of
which can lead to blindness if left untreated, in children
as young as six months of age.
Agreement
Between NASA And The Chicago Fire Department Could Lead
To Improvements For Fire Fighters
Fire fighting could be safer and more efficient
in the future thanks to an agreement signed recently
between NASA and the City of Chicago.
Space-Age
Forceps To Make Infant Delivery Safer
NASA technology involving composite materials and
fiber optic sensing may soon be at work in hospital
delivery rooms, easing infants' entry into life.
Marshall
Begins Testing Hybrid Rocket Motor Technology
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville,
Ala. is preparing to test a new rocket motor that will
combine the safety features of a liquid-propulsion system
with the cost savings of a solid- propulsion system.
NASA
Program May Revolutionize Rocket Propulsion And Air
Conditioning
Application of hydrostatic bearing technologies
may well revolutionize the world commercial air- conditioning
industry, eliminate a source of environmentally hazardous
chlorofluorocarbons, and speed the development of the
next generation of military and civilian spacecraft.
NASA's
Help Is Speeding Marine Jet To Market
Technological assistance from NASA's Marshall Space
Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and NASA contractor
Rocketdyne of Canoga Park, Calif., is paying off for
North American Marine Jet, Inc., of Benton, Ark.
North
Carolina, NASA Sign Technology Transfer Accord -
August 7, 1995
RALEIGH, NC -- North Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt, NASA Administrator
Daniel Goldin, and NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center Director G. Porter
Bridwell signed a memorandum of understanding today
to facilitate the transfer of Federal technologies to
North Carolina businesses, educational institutions
and individuals.
NASA
Technology To Target Offshore Oil And Gas
NASA and LSU are working to assist Specialty Plastics
Inc., of Baton Rouge, La., in developing innovative
joining and fitting technologies for advanced composite
piping systems for U.S. oil and gas industry.
Portable
Seat Lift Benefits The Disabled
Persons who cannot sit down or stand up easily may
soon benefit get a boost -- literally -- from the American
space program.
Space-Age
Training Offered To Commercial Industries
HUNTSVILLE, AL. -- Teledyne
Brown Engineering (TBE), in cooperation with NASA
, has developed a new tool to train astronauts, ground
controllers, and principal investigators on scientific
experiment operations for SpaceLab missions.
Compact
Gas/Tungsten-ARC Welding Torch Developed
NASA's Marshall
Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., has funded
the development by the Rocketdyne Division of Rockwell
International Corp. of a compact welding torch with
a zirconium oxide plasma-spray coated copper cup instead
of the usual ceramic head.
NASA
Technology Helps Inventor Clean Up
Technological assistance from NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) in Huntsville,
AL., is helping an inventor clean up -- literally.
NASA
Helps Invent Revolutionary X-ray Instrument
A three-year collaborative effort by NASA, industry
and university researchers has resulted in the development
of an instrument which can generate the world's most
intense source of commercial X- rays.
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