首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
NASA Inventions You Might Use Every Day In 1958, President Eisenhower signed the Space Act, officially creating the Nationa
NASA Inventions You Might Use Every Day In 1958, President Eisenhower signed the Space Act, officially creating the Nationa
admin
2010-11-02
127
问题
NASA Inventions You Might Use Every Day
In 1958, President Eisenhower signed the Space Act, officially creating the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. From the beginning, the purpose for the new branch extended beyond space ships and moon boots. The law prescribed that its research and advancements should benefit all people, and in its 50-year history, NASA has certainly fulfilled that role.
Although most people today will never set foot on the moon, everyone likely comes in con tact with a NASA by-product every day. Partnering with various research teams and companies, NASA continues to produce a vast array of new technologies and products that have improved our daily lives. Basic steps in health, safety, communications and even casual entertainment find their roots in the government branch commonly associated with rocket ships and floating people. In fact, NASA has filed more than 6,300 patents with the U.S. government.
Each year since 1976, NASA has published a list of every commercialized technology and product linked to its research. The NASA journal Spinoff highlights these products, which have included things like improved pacemakers, state of the art exercise machines and satellite radio. Each product was made possible thanks to a NASA idea or innovation.
But it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to use many of these so-called by-products. Read on to learn about some of these familiar products.
1. Water Filters
Water is the essential ingredient to human survival. Since people cannot live without water, the ability to convert contaminated water to pure water is an incredibly important scientific achievement.
Astronauts needed a way to cleanse water they take up into space, since bacteria and sickness would be highly problematic. Water filter technology had existed since the early 1950s, but NASA wanted to know how to clean water in more extreme situations and keep it clean for longer periods of time.
If you look at a water filter, you can usually detect small chunks of charcoal (木炭) inside of them. Sometimes, when you first use a water filter, you’ll even notice tiny black flecks from those chunks. This charcoal is specially activated and contains silver ions that neutralize bacteria in the water. Along with killing bacteria in the water, the filters also prevent further bacterial growth. Companies have borrowed from this same technology to bring us the water filter systems millions of people use at home every day.
2. Cordless Tools
When you’re sucking up bits of dirt or crumbs around the house with a handheld cordless vacuum, you are actually using the same technology that astronauts used on the moon. Although Black & Decker had already invented the first battery-powered tools in 1961, the NASA-related research helped refine the technology that led to lightweight, cordless medical instruments, hand held vacuum cleaners and other tools.
In the mid-1960s, to prepare for the Apollo missions to the moon, NASA needed a tool that astronauts could use to obtain samples of rocks and soil. The drill had to be lightweight, compact and powerful enough to dig deep into the surface of the moon. Since rigging up a cord to a drill in outer space would be a difficult feat, NASA and Black & Decker invented a battery-powered, magnet-motor drill. Working in the context of a limited space environment, Black & Decker developed a computer program for the tool that reduced the amount of power expended during use to maximize battery life.
After the NASA project, Black & Decker applied the same principles to make other lightweight, battery-powered tools for everyday consumers.
3. Long-distance Telecommunications
The ability to carry on long-distance telephone conversations did not happen overnight. It doesn’t link back to one specific NASA invention—improved telecommunication took place over decades of work.
Before humans were sent into space, NASA built satellites that could communicate with people on the ground about what outer space was like. Using similar satellite technology, around 200 communication satellites orbit the globe each day. These satellites send and receive messages that allow us to call our friends in Beijing when we’re in Boston. NASA monitors the locations and health of many of these satellites to ensure that we can continue to talk to people around the sorrier or overseas.
4. Shoe Insoles
When Neil Armstrong famously spoke of "one giant leap for mankind," he probably didn’t foresee the literal connotation it would come to have. Today’s athletic shoes have borrowed the technology of the moon boots that first took that leap.
The space suit designed for the Apollo missions included specially-made boots that put a spring in astronaut’s steps while providing ventilation. Athletic shoe companies have taken this technology and adopted it to construct better shoes that lessen the impact on your feet and legs.
For instance, in the mid-1980s, shoe company KangaROOS USA applied the principles and materials in moon boots to a new line of athletic shoes. With help ’from NASA, KangaROOS patented a three-dimensional polyurethane (聚氨酯) foam fabric that distributes the force on your feet that happens when you walk or run. By coiling the fibers within the fabric, the KangaROOS absorb the energy from your foot hitting the ground, rebounding it back to your feet.
5. Ear Thermometer
Taking your temperature when sick can be tricky business. A standard mercury thermometer can prove difficult to read, and a rectal (直肠的) one is just plain uncomfortable. In 1991, infrared thermometers that you place into your ears took the work out of it, simplifying and speeding up the process.
Diatek, which developed the first of these kinds of thermometers, saw a need to reduce the amount of time nurses spend taking temperatures. With around one billion temperature readings taken in hospitals in the United States each year and a shortage of nurses, the company set out to shave off the precious minutes otherwise required to watch mercury rise. Instead, Diatek took advantage of NASA’s previous advancements in measuring the temperature of stars with infrared technology.
Together with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab, the company invented an infrared sensor that serves as the thermometer. Aural thermometers with these infrared sensors take your temperature by measuring the amount of energy your eardrum gives off into the ear canal. Since the eardrum is inside our bodies, it acts as an accurate sensor for the energy, or heat, inside of our bodies that increases when we get sick. Hospital models can perform a temperature reading in less than two seconds.
6. Scratch-resistant Lenses
If you drop a pair of eyeglasses on the ground, the lenses probably won’t break. That’s be cause in 1972, the Food and Drug Administration began requiring manufacturers to use plastic rather than glass to make lenses. Plastics are cheaper to use, better at absorbing ultraviolet radiation, lighter and not prone to shattering. Nevertheless, they also had an Achilles heel, a deadly defect. Uncoated plastics tend to scratch easily, and scratched lenses could impair someone’s sight.
Because of dirt and particles found in space environments, NASA needed a special coating to protect space equipment, particularly astronaut helmet visors. Recognizing an opportunity, the Foster Grant sunglasses manufacturer licensed the NASA technology for its products. The special plastics coating made its sunglasses ten times more scratch-resistant than uncoated plastics.
You can take your temperature by putting an infrared thermometer into your ______.
选项
答案
ear
解析
白处应为名词。原文该句中,infrared thermometers后的定语从句表明红外线温度计可放进“耳朵”测量体温,由此可见,本题答案应为ear一词。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/rks7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteacompositiononthetopicChangesinPeople’sWaysofCommunicat
Iamoneofthemanycitypeoplewhoarealwayssayingthatgiventhechoicewewouldprefertoliveinthecountryawayfromth
OnemajordecisionwhichfacestheAmericanstudentreadytobeginhighereducationisthechoiceofattendingalargeuniversit
Lazinessisasin,everyoneknowsthat.Wehaveprobablyallhadlecturespointingoutthatlazinessis【B1】______,thatitisw
A、Itreflectscommercialinterests.B、Itisafashionableprofessionalevent.C、Itisanessentialaffair{orinternationalcine
LondonisthecenteroftheinternationalartmarketandSothehy’s,whichhasits【B1B】______there,istheworld’sbiggestand
A、Fromtheplacewheretheagreementwassigned.B、Fromthepeoplewhosignedtheagreement.C、Fromthesignificanceittriedto
Man,eveninthelowerstagesofdevelopment,possessesafacultywhich,forwantofabettername,IshallcallNumberSense.T
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledisaDiplomaEverything.Youshouldwrite
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledIsaDiplomaEverything?Youshouldwrite
随机试题
组织目标是通过一定的计划工作来实现的。()
一患者为右侧颞下间隙脓肿引发多间隙感染,经行颞部及颌下切口,贯通引流术;有大量脓性分泌物流出。此患者应采用的引流方式是
谁可以作为本案原告?如果双方达成调解协议,由被告赔偿原告各项损失5万元,1个月内付清,但对诉讼费用的分担,双方未能达成一致,则:
某煤矿企业为了赶进度,违反安全生产程序进行超量挖掘,这种行为不符合安全生产的()要求。
甲公司为上市公司,2×15年至2×17年发生的相关交易如下:(1)2×15年4月1日,购入A公司当日发行的一笔债券,面值为2000万元,期限为5年,票面年利率为6%,每年3月31日付息,到期归还最后一期本息。甲公司支付购买价款1800万元,另支付交易费用
从行业规范要求角度,物业管理职业道德主要内容有()。
在飘来飘去的朋友圈谣言面前,我们需要对传统的治理模式进行反思。一个更公开的、更亲民的政府,一个更克制的、更有限的市场,一个更平和的、更理想的社会,都是文明开放的舆论生态场不可或缺的。坦率而言,无论在哪一个方面,距离这个状态都还有很长的路要走,而在当下,也许
编译程序将高级语言程序翻译成与之等价的机器语言程序,该机器语言程序称为()。
Itwasrainingoutside,soMrs.Smith______herraincoat.
Peopletravelinglongdistancesfrequentlyhavetodecideif【M1】______theywouldprefertogobylandorsea.Hardlycananyon
最新回复
(
0
)