Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Military Space News .




ROBO SPACE
2013 FIRST Robotics Kick-Off Event
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Jan 08, 2013


For many years, the NASA Robotics Alliance Project has been supporting participation in the FIRST Robotics Competition by providing grants to high school teams as well as sponsoring FIRST regional competitions.

The 2013 FIRST Robotics Competition kicks off on Jan. 5, 2013. The kickoff event will be broadcast on NASA TV and marks the beginning of the season for high school students from across the nation to design and build robots to compete in an annual tournament against a field of competitors.

During the broadcast, FIRST founder Dean Kamen and the First Robotics Competition designers will reveal the game and announce the rules of the 2013 competition.

The 2013 FIRST Robotics Competition
The FIRST Robotics Competition is an exciting, nationwide competition that teams professionals and young people to solve an engineering design problem in an intense and competitive way.

For many years, the NASA Robotics Alliance Project has been supporting participation in the FIRST Robotics Competition by providing grants to high school teams as well as sponsoring FIRST regional competitions.

Providing support to competitions like FIRST Robotics is one way the NASA Robotics Alliance Project strives to create a human, technical and programmatic resource of robotics capabilities to aid future robotic space exploration missions.

Check out pictures from 2012 FIRST Robotics competitions in California. NASA JPL FIRST Robotics Image Gallery

Crew Prepares for Student Robotics Competition
Houston - The Expedition 34 crew wrapped up its first workweek of the new year aboard the International Space Station with scientific research, routine maintenance and preparations for robotics competition taking place aboard the complex next week.

Commander Kevin Ford and Flight Engineer Tom Marshburn, both NASA astronauts, configured bowling-ball-sized free-flying satellites known as Synchronized Position Hold, Engage, Reorient, Experimental Satellites, or SPHERES.

Station crews beginning with Expedition 8 have operated these robots to test techniques that could lead to advancements in automated dockings, satellite servicing, spacecraft assembly and emergency repairs.

During the SPHERES Zero Robotics competition on Friday, Jan. 11, teams of high school students will gather at the European Space Research and Technology Center in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., to watch the best teams' algorithms command the free-flying robots through a series of maneuvers and objectives.

In addition to assisting Ford with the SPHERES set up, Marshburn donned hardware to monitor his blood pressure, heart rate and activity levels for the Integrated Cardiovascular experiment.

Researchers are studying the atrophy of the heart muscle that appears to occur during long-duration spaceflight to develop countermeasures to keep the crew healthy. The research may also have benefits for people on Earth with heart problems.

Flight Engineer Chris Hadfield of the Canadian Space Agency spent some time working with the hardware for the European Space Agency's Muscle Atrophy Research and Exercise System, or MARES, which studies the effects of microgravity on a crew member's muscular system during spaceflight.

As crew members use the MARES hardware to exercise, it measures seven different human joints, encompassing nine different angular movements, as well as two additional linear movements for the arms and legs.

Hadfield later used a vacuum to clean a fan filter within the European Drawer Rack inside the Columbus module.

On the Russian side of the station, Flight Engineers Oleg Novitskiy and Evgeny Tarelkin conducted the BAR experiment, which looks at methods and instruments for detecting the location of an air leak from one of the station's modules.

Novitskiy also stowed trash and unneeded items inside the ISS Progress 48 cargo craft for disposal when that vehicle completes its mission at the station in February and undocks from the station's Pirs docking compartment for a destructive re-entry.

The third cosmonaut aboard the station, Flight Engineer Roman Romanenko, worked with a Russian experiment studying plasma crystal formation in microgravity. Romanenko rounded out his day with some troubleshooting on a display screen inside the Soyuz TMA-07M spacecraft that brought him to the station on Dec. 21 along with Hadfield and Marshburn.

Being members of an international crew, the astronauts and cosmonauts of Expedition 34 will enjoy a three-day weekend with the observance of the Russian Orthodox Christmas holiday on Monday.

Crew members will have an opportunity to talk with family back on Earth through video-teleconferencing, conduct routine housekeeping chores and continue their daily two-hour exercise regimen to keep fit during their five months aboard the orbiting complex.

.


Related Links
FIRST Robotics Competition
NASA Education
Zero Robotics website
SPHERES Zero Robotics
MARES
All about the robots on Earth and beyond!






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








ROBO SPACE
Crew Prepares for Student Robotics Competition
Houston TX (SPX) Jan 07, 2013
The Expedition 34 crew wrapped up its first workweek of the new year aboard the International Space Station with scientific research, routine maintenance and preparations for robotics competition taking place aboard the complex next week. Commander Kevin Ford and Flight Engineer Tom Marshburn, both NASA astronauts, configured bowling-ball-sized free-flying satellites known as Synchronized ... read more


ROBO SPACE
Dutch Patriot missiles head for Turkey's Syria border

US Patriot missiles begin arriving in Turkey

Patriot missile troops in Turkey as Syria war worsens

NATO begins deploying Patriot missiles in Turkey

ROBO SPACE
Iran develops new missile launcher

Thatcher 'warned France to cut off Exocets in Falklands war'

Raytheon awarded $254.6 million for Tomahawk missile

NATO says Syria regime firing 'Scud-style missiles'

ROBO SPACE
US drone attacks kill eight in Pakistan: officials

What a UAV Can Do With Depth Perception

"Sky Rider" to be integrated within the Digital Army Program

US drones kill 12 Taliban in Pakistan: officials

ROBO SPACE
DARPA selects SwRI's K-band space crosslink radio for flight development as part of System F6 Program

BAE pulls out of Australian comms tender

Can You Program a Radio to Dominate the Spectrum?

DoD Guidance on Spectrum Use for Hosted Payloads Needs New Approach

ROBO SPACE
SAIC Awarded Contract By U.S. Army Environmental Command

Block MEMS Awarded Multi-Million Dollar Contract to Find Buried Explosives

Fused Reality: Blending Reality and Simulation

Russia may soon draft new law on military service for women

ROBO SPACE
Iraq's seen as major arms buyer by 2020

Pentagon welcomes fiscal deal, warns against cuts

US military braces for sweeping budget cuts

Saudi mulls German tank deal: report

ROBO SPACE
Japan plans to raise military budget amid China row

Japan summons China envoy for first time under PM Abe

Hagel draws fire as Obama's Pentagon pick

Obama pick for Pentagon shaped by combat in Vietnam

ROBO SPACE
Nanoparticles reach new peaks

Oh, Christmas tree, oh Christmas tree

Britain to fund graphene research efforts

Synthetic and biological nanoparticles combined to produce new metamaterials




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement