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"Smart Dust" to Explore Planets
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Wed Apr 18, 2007 04:32 PM
from the new-but-not dept.
from the new-but-not dept.
Ollabelle writes "The BBC is reporting how tiny chips with flexible skins could be used to glide through a planet's atmosphere in swarms to gather data and report back. 'The idea of using millimetre-sized devices to explore far-flung locations is nothing new, but Dr Barker and his colleagues are starting to look in detail at how it might be achieved. The professor at Glasgow's Nanoelectronics Research Centre told delegates at the Royal Astronomical Society gathering that computer chips of the size and sophistication required to meet the challenge already existed.'"
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Technology: SmartDust Sensorwebs 'Real Soon Now' 143 comments
DeAshcroft writes "EE Times has a piece on progress with the four-year-old DARPA-conceived Smart Dust self-organizing sensor networks. Based on Berkeley's TinyOS and TinyDB open-source projects, the article reports several companies are demonstrating both military and civilian applications. Ars Technica adds background and commentary on issues not discussed in the EET article."
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Goo (Score:5, Insightful)
Replace "gather data" with "decimate indigenous life" and "report back" with "multiply exponentially", and you have either a classic horror movie or an Iain Banks novel.
Actually its quite scary either way... grey goo anyone?
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Do we still have a problem if the goo is green?
Your concerns are valid in general, but this does not strike me as persuasive argument for this particular technological instance.
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Seriously, what's artificial? I assume (If I'm wrong shoot me down, assumption being the mother of all f**k-ups) you are talking about orbital or deep space based habitations in this instance, but I have real difficulty defining artificial. If we are a product of an ecosystem how can we ever introduce something that is not natural? I should point out
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We can't be content just polluting our own planet? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:We can't be content just polluting our own plan (Score:2)
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How did you get modded up (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
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You realise you just lowered the self esteem of a thousand crater-faced geeks, don't you?
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Earth is a planet, is it a lifeless hellhole? Or are you merely implying that some subset of all planets might be lifeless hellholes? All planets not Earth are lifeless hellholes? All planets that are lifeless hellholes are, well, lifeless hellholes, except the ones that aren't?
The categorical statement is fun, and sounds cool, but is generally not worth a damn and doesn't really contribute anything to the conversation.
We don't know to what ext
Yes, and that is why they are sterilized (Score:2)
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This project is doomed (Score:5, Funny)
one wonders... (Score:1)
Expensive Proposition (Score:2)
Pshhh... (Score:1)
Just be careful the next time you think you see a powdery substance on your ass, the patriot act isn't going to help you.
oblig. (Score:1)
"honey, where's my research project?" whilst hearing the reliably and heart-warming sound of a hoover doing its best.
argh. i didn't really write that, did i?
/away being ashamed of myself.
whew, I thought you were going to say... (Score:1)
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One can't help but wonder (Score:2)
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Hmm always thought these ants where too clever... runs out on an ant-hunt
look on the bright side (Score:1)
Micro-rovers (Score:2)
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Maybe because it costs so damn much to get a payload to Mars, you might as well send a payload that's going to pay back. Sojourner was only designed to last 7 days; and even after 83 days it had only traveled 100 meters. Compared to what the big rovers have accomplished, Sojourner was a joke.
You need a big vehicle with big wheels or tracks and a complex suspension system to navigate around a rock-strewn plain, which by
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Why would 12 microrovers cost more than one big rover? (The next one under preparation is much bigger than even Spirit.)
I meant Sojourner-sized, not Sojourner technology. Sojourner relied on a separate lander to send messages back, and thus couldn't wonder far. We don't need that. I am th
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Remember economies of scale can be applied to increasing mass, not just increasing quantities. For one launch, one landing, one chassis you can carry more instruments. Not just more, but more complex. The MER's each carry a stereo high res camera, stereo navigation camera, 2 stereo hazard cameras, microscopic imager, mossbaue
Poor Martians (Score:3, Funny)
Ah-choo (Score:1)
battery (Score:2, Interesting)
batteries. Battery lifetime is a challenge itself for smart dust, what happens when the application requires
data to be transmitted all the time in order to monitor changes constatly, how long would the nodes last? In
battlefields there's no need to transmit data unless something happens, like an explosion will trigger an event.
Anyhow, this is a great idea and makes a very good project!
Attribution?! (Score:2, Interesting)
Prior Art (Score:2)
How about cubesats (Score:2)
Even if all they carried was a simple camera we could collect lots of interesting data.
Plus it may give us a better idea of where to send the more expensive probes
Nano-cluelessness strikes again. (Score:2)
But, hmmm, funny how you only hear this kind of buzz from people that have not a clue about the basic laws of scale, as related to surface area versus volume, wavelengths of radio and light, and surface tension.
In a nutshell, start with a cell-phone with camera, and ponder what happens as you shrink it by a factor of ten, again and again. Surmise what happens to it's audio and video sensor resolutions, the efficiency of xmitting antenn
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cart-before the horse:
In order for those tiny things to gather, they'd have to, individually, be able to sense, navigate, communicate, and move. You have to explain that basic stage first before you can assume they can do the job once aggregated.
Basic problem:
As far as I know, we can't build devices of convenient sizes and with unlimited funds to sense, navigate, communicate, move, and aggregate into any useful function. It's an awfully huge leap of faith to just
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>Nanotechnology is a new engineering discipline.
No, it's been around for 20 years.
>but it's already an industry.
No, it's a buzz-word-- an industry would be building something. Nanotech has burnt up over $400 million in capital, with no tangible results other than sunscreen.
>-nothing insurmountable or fundamental.
Try reading up about the issue of
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Fortunately there's sufficient "dumb dust" around that the smart variety will be forced into small, unpopular cliques, where it will spend most of it's time playing RPGs and discussing the relative merits of Star Trek versus Firefly.
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