Categories
Archives
- July 2010 (1)
- June 2010 (1)
- May 2010 (5)
- April 2010 (5)
- March 2010 (3)
- February 2010 (2)
- January 2010 (2)
- December 2009 (2)
- November 2009 (2)
- October 2009 (5)
- September 2009 (2)
- August 2009 (4)
- July 2009 (5)
- June 2009 (7)
- May 2009 (5)
- April 2009 (11)
- March 2009 (13)
- February 2009 (12)
- January 2009 (6)
- October 2008 (3)
- September 2008 (5)
- August 2008 (2)
- July 2008 (1)
- February 2008 (2)
- December 2007 (1)
- November 2007 (1)
- October 2007 (1)
- April 2007 (1)
- April 2005 (1)
NASA@Home and City Reviewed in WIRED Magazine’s Science Blog
It’s not true, as I grew up thinking, that Velcro or Tang are spinoffs of the U.S. space program. But I can live with that. There are plenty of things that are.

As an easy guide to some of these highlights, NASA has released a clever around-the-house and around-the-city Flash site (link takes you to their multimedia page, click on “NASA Home and City”) that details a whole host of common materials that do in fact owe their existence to the space program.
A few of my favorites: The Dustbuster vacuum owes its origin to work Black and Decker did for the Apollo missions, developing a portable handheld drill for extracting core samples from the lunar surface. Most enriched baby food today includes ingredients that were developed out of research into using algae as a recycling agent during long-term space travel.
The first retractable NFL stadium roof, at Houston&rquo;s Reliant Park, was built with a semi-translucent fabric stronger than steel, made possible by research into spacesuit materials. The same stuff has since been used all over, including at the Denver International Airport, and the San Diego Convention Center.
And of course there is hyper-spectral imaging, which is in all of our lives, right? This involves technology used by NASA satellites to monitor temperature and climate changes. Now also used to monitor frozen chickens.
Many of these space-to-the-home technologies will be familiar to longtime NASA-watchers. But I’m going to guess that a few surprises will be there for everyone.
Image: Screen shot of NASA City feature. Credit: NASA
From http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2008/02/nasas-in-your-f.html by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
by








Comments
There are no comments for this entry yet.