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Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques. by Jules Kenol
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1NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20010069674: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques
By NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
This paper presents an artificial intelligence monitoring system developed by the NASA Glenn Principal Investigator Microgravity Services project to help the principal investigator teams identify the primary vibratory disturbance sources that are active, at any moment in time, on-board the International Space Station, which might impact the microgravity environment their experiments are exposed to. From the Principal Investigator Microgravity Services' web site, the principal investigator teams can monitor via a graphical display, in near real time, which event(s) is/are on, such as crew activities, pumps, fans, centrifuges, compressor, crew exercise, platform structural modes, etc., and decide whether or not to run their experiments based on the acceleration environment associated with a specific event. This monitoring system is focused primarily on detecting the vibratory disturbance sources, but could be used as well to detect some of the transient disturbance sources, depending on the events duration. The system has built-in capability to detect both known and unknown vibratory disturbance sources. Several soft computing techniques such as Kohonen's Self-Organizing Feature Map, Learning Vector Quantization, Back-Propagation Neural Networks, and Fuzzy Logic were used to design the system.
“NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20010069674: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20010069674: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques
- Author: ➤ NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
- Language: English
“NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20010069674: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) - ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE - ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY - MICROGRAVITY - MONITORS - VIBRATION MEASUREMENT - INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION - MICROELECTROMECHANICAL SYSTEMS - FUZZY SYSTEMS - VECTOR QUANTIZATION - Jules, Kenol - Lin, Paul P.
Edition Identifiers:
- Internet Archive ID: NASA_NTRS_Archive_20010069674
Downloads Information:
The book is available for download in "texts" format, the size of the file-s is: 18.39 Mbs, the file-s for this book were downloaded 67 times, the file-s went public at Wed Oct 19 2016.
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Abbyy GZ - Animated GIF - Archive BitTorrent - DjVuTXT - Djvu XML - Item Tile - Metadata - Scandata - Single Page Processed JP2 ZIP - Text PDF -
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2NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20020082952: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques. Part 2; Preliminary System Performance Results
By NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
This paper presents the preliminary performance results of the artificial intelligence monitoring system in full operational mode using near real time acceleration data downlinked from the International Space Station. Preliminary microgravity environment characterization analysis result for the International Space Station (Increment-2), using the monitoring system is presented. Also, comparison between the system predicted performance based on ground test data for the US laboratory "Destiny" module and actual on-orbit performance, using measured acceleration data from the U.S. laboratory module of the International Space Station is presented. Finally, preliminary on-orbit disturbance magnitude levels are presented for the Experiment of Physics of Colloids in Space, which are compared with on ground test data. The ground test data for the Experiment of Physics of Colloids in Space were acquired from the Microgravity Emission Laboratory, located at the NASA Glenn Research Center, Cleveland, Ohio. The artificial intelligence was developed by the NASA Glenn Principal Investigator Microgravity Services Project to help the principal investigator teams identify the primary vibratory disturbance sources that are active, at any moment of time, on-board the International Space Station, which might impact the microgravity environment their experiments are exposed to. From the Principal Investigator Microgravity Services' web site, the principal investigator teams can monitor via a dynamic graphical display, implemented in Java, in near real time, which event(s) is/are on, such as crew activities, pumps, fans, centrifuges, compressor, crew exercise, structural modes, etc., and decide whether or not to run their experiments, whenever that is an option, based on the acceleration magnitude and frequency sensitivity associated with that experiment. This monitoring system detects primarily the vibratory disturbance sources. The system has built-in capability to detect both known and unknown vibratory disturbance sources. Several soft computing techniques such as Kohonen's Self-Organizing Feature Map, Learning Vector Quantization, Back-Propagation Neural Networks, and Fuzzy Logic were used to design the system.
“NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20020082952: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques. Part 2; Preliminary System Performance Results” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20020082952: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques. Part 2; Preliminary System Performance Results
- Author: ➤ NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
- Language: English
“NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20020082952: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques. Part 2; Preliminary System Performance Results” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) - MICROGRAVITY - INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION - PERFORMANCE TESTS - ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE - DOWNLINKING - ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY - FUZZY SYSTEMS - VECTOR QUANTIZATION - CHARACTERIZATION - FREQUENCIES - GROUND TESTS - NEURAL NETS - Jules, Kenol - Lin, Paul P. - Weiss, Daniel S.
Edition Identifiers:
- Internet Archive ID: NASA_NTRS_Archive_20020082952
Downloads Information:
The book is available for download in "texts" format, the size of the file-s is: 24.08 Mbs, the file-s for this book were downloaded 76 times, the file-s went public at Thu Oct 20 2016.
Available formats:
Abbyy GZ - Animated GIF - Archive BitTorrent - DjVuTXT - Djvu XML - Item Tile - Metadata - Scandata - Single Page Processed JP2 ZIP - Text PDF -
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- Whefi.com: Download
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- Internet Archive: Details
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Find NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) 20020082952: Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques. Part 2; Preliminary System Performance Results at online marketplaces:
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3Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques
By Jules, Kenol and Lin, Paul P
This paper presents an artificial intelligence monitoring system developed by the NASA Glenn Principal Investigator Microgravity Services project to help the principal investigator teams identify the primary vibratory disturbance sources that are active, at any moment in time, on-board the International Space Station, which might impact the microgravity environment their experiments are exposed to. From the Principal Investigator Microgravity Services' web site, the principal investigator teams can monitor via a graphical display, in near real time, which event(s) is/are on, such as crew activities, pumps, fans, centrifuges, compressor, crew exercise, platform structural modes, etc., and decide whether or not to run their experiments based on the acceleration environment associated with a specific event. This monitoring system is focused primarily on detecting the vibratory disturbance sources, but could be used as well to detect some of the transient disturbance sources, depending on the events duration. The system has built-in capability to detect both known and unknown vibratory disturbance sources. Several soft computing techniques such as Kohonen's Self-Organizing Feature Map, Learning Vector Quantization, Back-Propagation Neural Networks, and Fuzzy Logic were used to design the system.
“Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques” Metadata:
- Title: ➤ Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques
- Authors: Jules, KenolLin, Paul P
- Language: English
“Monitoring The Microgravity Environment Quality On-Board The International Space Station Using Soft Computing Techniques” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ ELECTRON SCATTERING - SCATTERING FUNCTIONS - HYDROGEN - SCATTERING CROSS SECTIONS - MATRICES (MATHEMATICS) - S WAVES
Edition Identifiers:
- Internet Archive ID: nasa_techdoc_20010069674
Downloads Information:
The book is available for download in "texts" format, the size of the file-s is: 6.17 Mbs, the file-s for this book were downloaded 337 times, the file-s went public at Mon May 30 2011.
Available formats:
Abbyy GZ - Animated GIF - Archive BitTorrent - DjVu - DjVuTXT - Djvu XML - JPEG Thumb - Metadata - Scandata - Single Page Processed JP2 ZIP - Text PDF -
Related Links:
- Whefi.com: Download
- Whefi.com: Review - Coverage
- Internet Archive: Details
- Internet Archive Link: Downloads
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