Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Astronauts Test Google Glass, Heart Monitor in Undersea Base



A team of undersea astronauts took to the ocean floor last week to test out innovative new technologies that may one day make life in space easier.

The space tech sea trials came amid spectacular simulated underwater "spacewalks" during the NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations mission (NEEMO), in which the underwater astronauts tested out a drill for a potential asteroid mission.

The tests included using Google Glass to help astronauts keep track of what procedures to do next in space, and a Bluetooth heart rate monitor that would improve upon what the International Space Station uses right now.

"There's a lot of equipment on board the station that can cause interference with other devices," NASA astronaut Jeanette Epps told reporters from the Aquarius lab, 62 feet (19 meters) under water off the coast of Key Largo, Florida.

The astronauts tried out the heart rate monitor while using a hair dryer to see if that would produce interference, and early indications show that the monitor still works well, she added.

European Space Agency astronaut Thomas Pesquet does a simulated spacewalk during the NEEMO 18 mission, which took place 62 feet underwater off the coast of Key Largo, Florida.

Credit: NASA

The NEEMO mission, NASA's 18th, aims to test out technologies and procedures that would be useful for future space missions.

Those included a drill astronauts manipulated during excursions in wetsuits and helmets, checking if it was possible to use the tool in a neutrally buoyant environment without unduly stressing either the drill or the astronaut.

The astronauts also ran procedures that could work with a five- or 10-minute delay in communications. In these tests, astronauts had four different places that they visited in a sort of circle.

They would sequentially explain what they saw in each location, move on to the next, and aim to return to the first spot around the same time ground control received the information from the first spot and was able to respond. The astronauts would try to accomplish the same thing for the other three spots.

"With a 10-minute delay in each direction, like we experienced today, you can't hold a rock up to a camera and say this is what you what you want," said NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei.

"So what we did is we had a circuit of four different places. We went to the first place, we showed a variety of things, and a survey of the general area."

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