Search results for "nasa"
Microchip showcases RISC-V-based FPGA and space-compute solutions
Mid-range FPGAs and System-on-Chip (SoC) FPGAs have played a major role in moving computer workloads to the network edge.
The world’s first general-purpose humanoid robot
Figure, a robotics startup based in the United States, has unveiled its plans for ‘the world’s first commercially viable general purpose humanoid robot,’ named Figure 01.
NASA cancels first Artemis I launch attempt
Artemis I is a flight test to launch NASA’s Space Launch System rocket and an uncrewed Orion spacecraft around the Moon before the Artemis II mission with astronauts aboard.
Renesas’ radiation-hardened ICs lift off inboard Artemis 1 mission
Renesas hasannounced that hundreds of its radiation-hardened (rad-hard) integrated circuits (ICs), including over 50 different part numbers, are onboard the Artemis 1 launch that blasted off on November 16.
Father of digital twins to headline at IOT Solutions World Congress
The IOT Solutions World Congress (IOTSWC), the international event devoted to industry transformation through disruptive technologies, will feature Michael Grieves, father of the digital twin concept, as a speaker at its 2023 edition.
A gold rush to D-band and beyond
“The D-band is the new E-band” read the shirts worn by Virginia Diodes (VDI) employees at a recent microwave symposium.
Master Bond's new electrically isolating epoxy
Master Bond EP5TC-80 is a thermally conductive, electrically insulating, one part epoxy system for bonding, sealing and small encapsulating applications. It meets NASA low outgassing requirements.
The rise of 3D-printed pizza
From plastic, to metal, to food – is there no limit towhat a 3D printer can do?
Powering NASA’s climate change mineral dust detector on ISS
Critical elements of a new instrument attached to the International Space Station (ISS) this summer, designed to examine the chemical composition of atmospheric mineral dust, is powered by hardware from high-performance electronics company Alpha Data.
Inflatable space habitats use sensors embedded in webbing for structural health monitoring
Future human space exploration requires a safe living environment for astronauts. That is why a robust structural health monitoring (SHM) process is imperative to ensure equipment safety, particularly for the inflatable habitat structures that are the most cost-efficient solution to the astronauts’ living space needs.By Ted Fetterman, Bally Ribbon Mills reports.