MIT & RIT Creating a 3-D "Super RoadMap" to the Solar System
Think of it as a GoogleMaps to the Solar System: a 3-D "super roadmaps" of other planets and moons that will provide robots, astronauts and engineers with the details about atmospheric composition, biohazards, wind speed and temperature -information that could help land future spacecraft and more effectively navigate roving cameras across a Martian or lunar terrain. Manned and robotic missions navigating on other bodies in our solar system will have the ability
to find landmarks and destinations to point them in the right direction.
RIT scientist Donald Figer and his team are developing a new type of detector that uses LIDAR (LIght Detection and Ranging), a technique similar to radar, but which uses light instead of radio waves to measure distances. The project will deliver a new generation of optical/ultraviolet imaging LIDAR detectors that will significantly extend NASA science capabilities for planetary applications by providing 3-D location information for planetary surfaces and a wider range of coverage than the single-pixel detectors currently combined with LIDAR.
The LIDAR imaging detector will be able to distinguish topographical details that differ in height by as little as one centimeter. This is an improvement in a technology that conflates objects less than one meter in relative height. LIDAR used today could confuse a boulder for a pebble, an important detail when landing a spacecraft.
"The imaging LIDAR detector could become a workhorse for a wide
range of NASA missions," says Figer, professor in RIT's Chester F.
Carlson Center for Imaging Science and director of the RIDL. "It could
support NASA's planetary missions like Europa Geophysical Orbiter or a
High-resolution Spatial Mapper."
LIDAR works by measuring the time it takes for light to travel from a
laser beam to an object and back into a light detector. The new
detector can be used to measure distance, speed and rotation. It will
provide high-spatial resolution topography as well as measurements of
planetary atmospheric properties--pressure, temperature, chemical
composition and ground-layer properties. The device can also be used to
probe the environments of comets, asteroids and moons to determine
composition, physical processes and chemical variability.
Working with Figer are Zoran Ninkov and Stefi Baum from RIT and Brian
Aull and Robert Reich from Lincoln Laboratory. The team will apply
LIDAR techniques to design and fabricate a Geiger-Mode Avalanche
Photodiode array detector. The device will consist of an array of
sensors hybridized to a high-speed readout circuit to enable robust
performance in space. The radiation-hard detector will capture
high-resolution images and consume low amounts of power.
The imaging component of the new detector will capture swaths of entire
scenes where the laser beam travels. In contrast, today's LIDAR systems
rely upon a single pixel design, limiting how much and how fast
information can be captured.
"You would have to move your one pixel across a scene to build up an
image," Figer says. "That's the state of the art of LIDAR right now.
That's what is flying on spacecraft now, looking down on Earth to get
topographical information and on instruments flying around other
planets."
"You can have your pixel correspond to a few feet by a few feet spatial
resolution instead of kilometer by kilometer," Figer says. "And now you
can take LIDAR pictures at fine resolutions and build up a map in hours
instead of taking years at comparable resolution with a single image."
The imaging LIDAR detector will be tested at RIDL in environments that mimic aspects of operations in NASA space missions.
In addition to planetary mapping, imaging LIDAR detectors will have
uses on Earth, including remote sensing of the atmosphere for both
climate studies and weather forecasting, topographical mapping,
biohazard detection, autonomous vehicle navigation, battlefield
friend/foe identification and missile tracking, to name a few.
"There is an increasing demand for highly accurate three-dimensional
data to both map and monitor the changing natural and manmade
environment," says Ninkov, professor of imaging science at RIT. "As
well as spaceborne applications there are terrestrial applications for
LIDAR systems such as determining bridge heights, the condition of
highways and mapping coastal erosion as sea heights rise."
Posted by Casey Kazan.
Source Links:
http://www.spaceref.com/news/viewpr.rss.spacewire.html?pid=25451







Well, I like Sci Fi, not to the case, but I remember a movie where the key to solve a war was to keep one such apparat away from the bad people but this map was of a galaxy. One for the sci fi to reality.
Posted by: jer35mx | May 20, 2008 at 04:38 PM