NASA Smartmorphing Materials and Structures 45
Bomber007 writes "As taken from here: "As part of the Morphing Project, scientists are developing smart wing materials that can bend on command, closely imitating a bird's wings during flight, and piezoelectric sensors that allow an aircraft to "feel" the motion of its wings, just like birds do, so it can adjust to different conditions.
Further research might see personal aircraft with self-healing materials, NASA says. And air cars that hover, fly backwards and upside down, just like bugs can.
NASA being NASA, many of the other potential applications are military: there's a vision for fighter bombers that could instantly morph into agile, high speed jets and also talk of fleets of attack aircraft without pilots."
More information can also be found at the NASA site here." Voltron. That's my comment.
Re:More NASA Projects: (Score:2)
Underwater Applications (Score:3)
However, fish are much more nimble than our cable-driven robots, and are better able to adapt their stroke to vortices produced by their tail fins. It seems like a morphing, feeling material would make artificial fish propulsion much easier.
Now, imagine a submarine, enclosed inside a giant fish-shaped, flopping hull...
-Paul Komarek
No, not Voltron (Score:1)
Re:Not for 20 years (Score:5)
Yeah, I mean look at the huge changes in aircraft technology between 1980 and 2000!
Back then, we all flew in things called "jet airplanes", some of which were made by outdated companies with names like "Boeing" and "McDonnell-Douglas". Way back then, models such as the exotic "747", "737" and "DC-10" were routinely used for passenger transport, although they had no idea how primitive such technology would look to their descendants.
Fortunately we can look back on their technological hubris and know that here, in the far future, we have developed much safer, cleaner, more efficient, and faster craft that put such archaeological curiosities to shame...
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Re:More NASA Projects: (Score:1)
Re:TERMINATOR 2! (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:2)
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Re:air cars? (Score:1)
Um, not to criticize too much, but did you watch the end of that movie?
I swear, when the Great Pumpkin does come, he is so gonna damn your non-believin' ass to pedestrian Hell.
air cars? (Score:1)
Not for 20 years (Score:3)
Re:Where have I heard this before? (Score:1)
Actually, Macross Plus was an OVA series, then became a video.
Wildly OT but who cares. Actually, OVA [everything2.com] (Original Video Animation) means that it was released first on video.
Neat Idea (Score:3)
Basically what these guys seem to be doing is using a part of the stiffness matrix most people avoid to create aerodynamic tailoring. Basically the stiffness matrix of every structure has components which not only control bending and stretching, but also couple the two. So if you pull on a structure with a non-zero B portion of the stiffness matrix, it bends. If you twist it, it stretches. Normally people do their damnedest to avoid this (they make sure the B terms are zero) as it makes the structure act really weird, but if you use it you can create tailoring effects for different loads and behaviors. The biggest area I've heard of them using it was tailoring helicoptor rotors for rotational speed. Looks like someone wants to use it for aircraft wings.
All this of course runs into the problem that for most structural materials you really can't change the shape that much since you are essentially deforming the structure. There are elastic limits to this sort of thing beyond which parts break. So unless you intend to build that plane out of rubber you might be in trouble.
more applications... (Score:4)
Re:Oh yea? (Score:1)
This is what makes a Harrier (AV8) a nice machine to dogfight in - basically you can divert the thrust straight down so that the plane jumps upwards (relative to itself). This will both scrub some forward velocity and translate the plane making a pursuer likely to lose a lock and to overfly.
Importantly there is only a very small chance of this being noticed by an opponent as the exhaust nozzles are both comparitively small and screened....
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Re:Oh yea? (Score:2)
Having said that something has gone wrong if you're dogfighting in a Tomcat anyway, that's what the Phoenix are for.
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Re:Yeah... (Score:1)
actually... (Score:2)
More NASA Projects: (Score:3)
Many of their air flight related projects can be previewed at http://ic.arc.nasa.gov/ne.html
My personal favorite project is at http://ic-www.arc.nasa.gov/projects/neuro/ifc/act
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*smack* (Score:1)
Are you deaf dumb AND blind? Go look up Robotech Valkyries, then you'll see what this technology is good for...
Peace,
Amit
ICQ 77863057
Re:Yeah... (Score:1)
Grab.
PS. I know it's sick, but I couldn't help it...
self-healing my ass. (Score:1)
Reminds me of..... (Score:1)
Yeah... (Score:1)
It'll be cool when I can have it. It's been theory (sci-fi) for quite some time.
I have a shotgun, a shovel and 30 acres behind the barn.
Re:Yeah... (Score:1)
hmm.. good point. I watched it blow in person. Was a fairly loud boom.
I have a shotgun, a shovel and 30 acres behind the barn.
Re:self-healing my ass. (Score:1)
Voltron...brings back the memories (Score:1)
Damn Ornithopters (Score:1)
fleets of unmanned aircraft (Score:1)
Re:only two more decades.. (Score:1)
They use a principle known as supercavitation and rockets.
From this month's Scientific American [sciam.com]
So much for the "silent service".
- tarkas
Re:only two more decades.. (Score:1)
Roswell (Score:1)
Re:Oh yea? (F 14's etc...) (Score:1)
during the late 70's / early 80's IIRC, called the MAW (Mission Adaptive Wing),
which not only did variable geometry (sweep),
but also had a (smoothly) variable camber airfoil
for optimizing wing performance during different flight regimes.
This would seem to be a natural progression of that concept.
The F111 was outfitted (again, IIRC) with a standard
starboard wing, and the port wing was the MAW.
I don't know what ever became of the project,
but last I saw the ship was sitting in pieces
at Davis Monthan (storage) in Arizona.
Re:Where have I heard this before? (Score:1)
TERMINATOR 2! (Score:1)
Oh yea? (Score:1)
But damn it would be great for some Saudi pilot to see an F-22 morph into DeathScythe...
only two more decades.. (Score:1)
Re:Not for 20 years (Score:3)
technology is going to change so much in the next 20 years that we can't begin to imagine what we will and won't be able to do
This really depends on your perspective. Some neo-futurists (with whom I agree) have started taking a different look at technology, which is more in terms of a "punctuated equilibria" style of development. That is to say, development of technology occurs in tremendous bursts of advancement, rather than on a linear, continual basis. On the basis of older futurism, people would be prone to suggest, for example (as, indeed, they did), in the early-20th century, that radio technology would develop to such an extent that our society would be completely transformed by way of traditional commercial radio broadcasts. Of course, this wasn't the case at all. Other, completely unpredictable developments (e.g., data processing, digital telecommunications) usurped the technological limelight from radio, which stayed largely static. I see futurists treating computers, today, much as they treated radio in the past.
Along these lines, I'd say that suggesting technology, especially with regard to something as incredibly specific as aircraft, is going to drastically change in the next 20 years is an unfounded suggestion. There may well be a lull in development, in which only previous technologies are advanced, and new ones are not invented (i.e., no punctuation in our equilibria).
Even were our experience of past development to support the theory that future development will be exponential, that argument would be essentially baseless. The inductive historical approach which says that our experience of development in the future will match our experience of development in the past is just based on the fact that, in the past, our experience of comparing the past to the future has yielded a predicted future similar to the past. The argument is copmletely circular and, therefore, invalid (though adequately abstruse that most people miss the logical fallacy).
Rubber Jets probably have problems too... (Score:1)
It only... (Score:1)
Where have I heard this before? (Score:3)
Berk Watkins
Re:more applications... (Score:1)
--
"Fuck your mama."
Re:Roswell (Score:1)
--
"Fuck your mama."
Re:It only... (Score:2)
gundam wing esque? (Score:1)
Re:Not for 20 years (Score:1)