Posted on 08/18/2014 8:24:12 PM PDT by null and void
NASA seems to love 3D printing it mustered up some 3D-printed rocket engine parts and 3D-printed pizza makers, but now the space agency is using the 3D-printing craze to create tiny space cameras.
Tiny space camera made of 3D-printed parts will look like this. (Image via NASA)
As far as I know, we are the first to attempt to build an entire instrument with 3D printing, said Jason Budinoff, aerospace engineer from NASAs Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland.
The 2-inch instrument is sized for a CubeSat satellite, which is made of units each about 4 inches on a side. It will also come equipped with fabricated mirrors and glass lenses and will undergo vibration and thermal-vacuum testing next year.
Tiny space cameras will be mounted to satellites like these. (Image via NASA)
Budinoff is also working on a 14-inch dual-channel telescope which will be more like a typical space telescope.
The instruments are being developed to prove how 3D printing could be used in space exploration and even cut costs and manufacturing time.
How it works
A computer-controlled laser will melt and fuse metal powder in designated locations as indicated by a 3D computer-aided-design (CAD) model. Since the components are built layer by layer it is possible to design internal features and passages that could not be cast or machined using more traditional manufacturing approaches.
The tiny camera will be made of four different pieces composed of powdered aluminum and titanium. If they were to use traditional manufacturing processes the camera would require between five and 10 times the number of parts.
Another plus: The component that helps reduce stray light in telescopes is angled in a pattern that instrument builders cannot create with traditional manufacturing approaches in a single piece.
What else is he trying to prove?
Budinoff also wants to demonstrate that he can use powdered aluminum to produce 3D-manufactured telescope mirrors, which has been a challenge because aluminum is so spongy and therefore difficult to polish. Under his plan, a 3D manufacturing vendor will fabricate an unpolished mirror blank appropriate for his 2-inch instrument. Then he will place the optic inside a pressure chamber filled with inert gas. As the gas pressure increases to 15,000 psi, the heated chamber in essence will squeeze the mirror to reduce the surface porosity a process called hot isostatic pressing.
Budinoffs tiny space camera project is set to be complete by the end of September and will undergo spaceflight testing in 2015.
Cool.
When 3D printers start making 3D printers, Skynet is nigh...
I’m starting to be regularly amazed by the things that can be printed. I never imagined that a mirror could be created using a printer. This, in addition to the potential for human organs to be printed. Crazy!
Mmmm, I know what I want for Christmas.
“When 3D printers start making 3D printers, Skynet is nigh...”
They already have. Most of the 3d printers you buy come with the files to print replacement parts. Of course they can’t print the computers or stepping motors, but they are available cheap.
Guy on Bloomberg today was talking about 3-D’s being used to make precise replacements for portions of missing skull and facebones out of advanced thermoplastics - use the CAT scan to come up with files to drive the printers - amazing....
Too late.
I’m waiting for someone to modify a 3D printer to print Braille on paper. Braille printers for computers cost thousands. A 3D printer should be able to do the job at a much reduced cost.
It is more of a mirror blank than a mirror.
Yes, I read the part about high pressure reduction in porosity. It’s still something to appreciate.
Absolutely. We live in remarkable times.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.