About Us · Advertising · Contact Us · Comments Friday, July 30, 2010    
 

Advertisement
Commercial Space Watch Home Page

 
Hot Topics | Nanotechnology - Space Tourism - X-Prize

Other SpaceRef Sites | SpaceRef - Mercury Today - Mars Today - Saturn Today

STATUS REPORT
Date Released: Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Source: Ames Research Center

NASA Ames Scientist Develops Chemical Sensor For the iPhone

image

Image; The chemical sensing prototype plugged into an iPhone 30-pin dock connector with the display-side up. Photo credit: Dominic Hart/NASA

Jing Li, a physical scientist at NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., along with other researchers working under the Cell-All program in the Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate, developed a proof of concept of new technology that would bring compact, low-cost, low-power, high-speed nanosensor-based chemical sensing capabilities to cell phones.

The device Li developed is about the size of a postage stamp and is designed to be plugged in to an iPhone to collect, process and transmit sensor data. The new device is able to detect and identify low concentrations of airborne ammonia, chlorine gas and methane. The device senses chemicals in the air using a "sample jet" and a multiple-channel silicon-based sensing chip, which consists of 16 nanosensors, and sends detection data to another phone or a computer via telephone communication network or Wi-Fi.

More information and high resolution photos here.


News from Moon Today

- Caltech Team Finds Evidence of Water in Moon Minerals

- NASA Honors Lunar Science Trailblazer Don Wilhelms

- NASA Names New Director for Lunar Science Institute

- Man in the Moon has 'Graphite Whiskers'

- NASA Radar returns first high-resolution view of an unusual crater near Moon’s north pole

- Research Suggests Water Content Of Moon Interior Underestimated

- Something Old, Something New, and If We do it Right, Maybe We Can Still Sail Into the Blue

- Inaugural Lunabotics Mining Competition Goes Live With NASA EDGE

- NASA Invites Public to Take Virtual Walk On The Moon

- Tune in to MyMoon Webcast to Learn About a New Citizen Scientist Program

- Lunar Polar Craters May Be Electrified

- LCROSS Program Receives Accolade From Space Foundation, Wins Swigert Award for Space Exploration

- Western researcher solves 37-year old space mystery

- New Lunar Images and Data Available to the Public

- Nimbus II and Lunar Orbiter 1 Imagery: A New Look at Earth in 1966

-

-

-

-

-

-

advertisment



Other Sites: SpaceRef - SpaceRef Asia - SpaceRef Canada - SpaceRef Europe - Mercury Today - Venus Today - Moon Today - Mars Today
Mars TV - Jupiter Today - Saturn Today - Astrobiology - Space Wire - Space Elevator - NASA Watch - BIO Science News - Nano2Sol

Copyright © 1999-2010 SpaceRef Interactive Inc., all rights reserved. Privacy Policy.
NASA Watch is copyright Reston Communications.