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Origami Space Technology Combines Art, Design, Science
Since he was eight years old, Robert Salazar has been making artistic1 creations from folded paper.
Now, he is taking his love of origami to a different place: outer space.
Salazar works with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory of the United States space agency NASA. He says that ideas from origami can help design devices for research and exploration:
"Origami offers the potential to take a very large structure, even a vast structure, and you can get it to fit within the rocket, go up, then deploy2 back out again. So it greatly magnifies what we are capable of building in space."
Researchers are using ideas from origami on several space agency projects.
Starshade
Manan Arya is a technologist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. He is working on a project called Starshade. The project's goal is to fit a large object into a rocket. Once the rocket reaches the correct point in space, the Starshade opens like a flower. This large flower shape is meant to block light to permit a space telescope to better see areas close to bright stars.
Starshade, Arya says, can be used to look for planets that orbit other stars.
"Seeing an exoplanet next to its parent star is like trying to image a firefly next to a search light, the searchlight being the star. Starshade seeks to block out that starlight so you can image a really faint exoplanet right next to it."
Other uses: a Robot and an Antenna3
Researchers are also using ideas from origami to design a robot and a special antenna for satellites.
The robot is called the Pop-up Flat Folding Explorer Robot, or PUFFER.
It can fold itself flat to get into small spaces. Salazar says the robot can explore environments "otherwise inaccessible4" to a robot. It could even be used to explore cave systems on our own planet, he adds.
Antennas5 on satellites capture and send communications signals.
Arya notes that the idea behind the special antenna's design is to pack it into very small satellites that are known as CubeSats. Arya says it is very useful to be able to fit large antennas into a small space:
"The bigger the antenna you have, the more gain your antenna has, so it is useful to have a big antenna that gets packaged into this tiny space that unfolds out to be a large antenna. The biggest CubeSat antennas we have right now are about half a meter."
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory origami-based technologies have a graceful6 beauty. In origami, Salazar said, art, science and engineering only have small differences.
I'm John Russell.
Words in This Story
origami – n. the Japanese art of folding paper into shapes that look like birds, animals, etc.
deploy –v. : to open up and spread out the parts of (something, such as a parachute)
exoplanet – n. a planet that orbits a star outside the solar system.
inaccessible – adj. difficult or impossible to reach, approach, or understand : not accessible
technologist – n. someone who is an expert in technology
1 artistic | |
adj.艺术(家)的,美术(家)的;善于艺术创作的 | |
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2 deploy | |
v.(军)散开成战斗队形,布置,展开 | |
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3 antenna | |
n.触角,触须;天线 | |
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4 inaccessible | |
adj.达不到的,难接近的 | |
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5 antennas | |
[生] 触角,触须(antenna的复数形式) | |
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6 graceful | |
adj.优美的,优雅的;得体的 | |
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