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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER OPPORTUNITY: Projected Background-Oriented Schlieren Imaging (LAR-TOPS-365)

General Information

  • Contract Opportunity Type: Special Notice (Updated)
  • Updated Published Date: Oct 11, 2023 04:00 pm EDT
  • Original Published Date: Oct 11, 2023 03:47 pm EDT
  • Updated Response Date: Oct 11, 2024 05:00 pm EDT
  • Original Response Date: Oct 11, 2024 05:00 pm EDT
  • Inactive Policy: 15 days after response date
  • Updated Inactive Date: Oct 26, 2024
  • Original Inactive Date: Oct 26, 2024
  • Initiative:

Classification

  • Original Set Aside:
  • Product Service Code: 9999 - MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
  • NAICS Code:
    • 927110 - Space Research and Technology
  • Place of Performance:

Description

NASA’s Technology Transfer Program solicits inquiries from companies interested in obtaining license rights to commercialize, manufacture and market the following technology. License rights may be issued on an exclusive or nonexclusive basis and may include specific fields of use. NASA provides no funding in conjunction with these potential licenses.

THE TECHNOLOGY:

Inventors at the NASA Langley Research Center (LAR) have developed a new background-oriented schlieren (BOS) imaging technique. The new technique enables vibration-tolerant, real-time, and reference-free BOS imaging for scientific investigations or industrial flow monitoring. Typically, BOS imaging requires a physical pattern on a retroreflective surface within the flow of interest to visualize that flow through changes in the pattern due to density changes between the pattern and a camera. Here, the BOS imaging technique does not require a physical pattern within the flow, and it is instead projected through the flow onto a retroreflective surface that is then imaged by a camera. Projecting the pattern allows the pattern to be changed mid-measurement and may lessen the cost of BOS imaging for a variety of flow visualization applications.

The Projected BOS imaging system developed at the NASA Langley Research Center provides a significant advancement over other BOS flow visualization techniques. Specifically, the present BOS imaging method removes the need for a physically patterned retroreflective background within the flow of interest and is therefore insensitive to the changing conditions due to the flow. For example, in a wind tunnel used for aerodynamics testing, there are vibrations and temperature changes that can affect the entire tunnel and anything inside it. Any patterned background within the wind tunnel will be subject to these changing conditions and those effects must be accounted for in the post-processing of the BOS image. This post-processing is not necessary in the Projected BOS process here. In the Projected BOS system, a pattern is projected onto a retroreflective background across the flow of interest. The imaged pattern in this configuration can be made physically (a pattern on a transparent slide) or can be digitally produced on an LCD screen. In this projection scheme, a reference image can be taken at the same time as the signal image, facilitating real-time BOS imaging and the pattern to be changed or optimized during the measurements. Thus far, the Projected BOS imaging technology has been proven to work by visualizing the air flow out of a compressed air canister taken with this new system.

To express interest in this opportunity, please submit a license application through NASA’s Automated Technology Licensing Application System (ATLAS) by visiting https://technology.nasa.gov/patent/LAR-TOPS-365

If you have any questions, please e-mail NASA’s Technology Transfer Program at Agency-Patent-Licensing@mail.nasa.gov with the title of this Technology Transfer Opportunity as listed in this SAM.gov notice and your preferred contact information. For more information about licensing other NASA-developed technologies, please visit the NASA Technology Transfer Portal at https://technology.nasa.gov/

These responses are provided to members of NASA’s Technology Transfer Program for the purpose of promoting public awareness of NASA-developed technology products, and conducting preliminary market research to determine public interest in and potential for future licensing opportunities. No follow-on procurement is expected to result from responses to this Notice.

Contact Information

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  • US

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