Help NASA Power the International Space Station
Posted by
on January 25, 2013 at 12:24 PM EST
Last week, NASA launched the ISS Longeron Shadowing Optimization Challenge—a
$30,000 competition that challenges citizen solvers to develop software
algorithms that make solar panels on the International Space Station
(ISS) more efficient. NASA is seeking solutions that reduce or eliminate
the shadows the station casts upon itself at various points during its
orbits of Earth. Ultimately, winning algorithms will help add power to
the space station and expand the number and types of science experiments
that can performed onboard.
NASA’s Center of Excellence for Collaborative Innovation and
its Vehicle Integrated Performance, Environments and Resources (VIPER)
office at Johnson Space Center are using the challenge to enlist citizen
innovators in the hunt for optimal positions for solar collectors
fastened to the space station so that that they generate as much power
as possible on the spacecraft. This power is essential to performing
science activities on the world class orbiting laboratory.
The energy used to
power the space station is generated by eight sets of solar cells, or
arrays, held to the station by longerons, long arms that are very
sensitive to temperature changes—expanding when hot, and contracting
when cold. Uneven shadows on longerons can cause solar array masts to
buckle and create a hazard to the space station. In addition to
maximizing the energy produced on the space station, winning algorithms
must also minimize shadows on the longerons to help ensure no longerons
fail.
The total prize purse for the challenge is $30,000.
Top prizes include $10,000 for the best solution with second and third
placed solutions earning $5,000 and $3,000 respectively, as well as
milestone prizes totaling $12,000. As a fun bonus, NASA-mission stickers
which have actually orbited the Earth on Space Shuttle Endeavour will
be awarded to the top five finishers.
The challenge is now live on the NASA Tournament Lab (NTL) on TopCoder.com.
NTL, operated in cooperation with Harvard University, is an online
virtual facility that harnesses the capabilities of citizen solvers to
create innovative, efficient solutions for specific, real-world
challenges being faced by the space agency's researchers. From NTL, to
the Centennial Challenges Program, to the NASA Open Innovation Pavilion, NASA is on the leading edge of how prizes can be used for mission impact in the Federal government.
The competition is one of more than 230 incentive prizes offered by over 45 Federal agencies on Challenge.gov so
far. Incentive prizes can yield a high return on the dollar and can
reach beyond the usual suspects to increase the number of entrepreneurs
and citizens tackling tough problems.
Cristin Dorgelo is Assistant Director for Grand Challenges at OSTP
No comments:
Post a Comment