viernes, 8 de marzo de 2019

Intern’s Virtual Reality Skills Flourish at NASA Langley | NASA

Intern’s Virtual Reality Skills Flourish at NASA Langley | NASA



Intern’s Virtual Reality 

Skills Spur NASA 

Langley’s Digital Transformation

Christine Odenwald inside NASA Langley's Engineering Design Studio.
Christine Odenwald, a 20-year-old modeling, simulation and visualization engineering major at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia, worked as an intern at NASA’s Langley Research Center for nearly a year. She’s excited about the potential for virtual reality technology to benefit society. “It's seems clear that it's going to be an increasing part of our lives.”
Credits: NASA/David C. Bowman
Christine Odenwald has virtually seen the future.
Over the course of a 12-month internship at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Virginia, Odenwald worked on a half-dozen projects related to virtual reality or augmented reality.
Christine Odenwald poses with a SAGE III on ISS display at NASA Langley.
Christine Odenwald helped create a virtual reality visualization of NASA’s SAGE III instrument, depicting it as it currently operates on the International Space Station. SAGE stands for Stratospheric Aerosol Gas Experiment. At events, Odenwald introduce the virtual model and coached new users on how to see it though a VR system headset.
Credits: NASA/Joshua Kinne
Early on, she helped shape a visualization that produced an astronaut’s-eye-view of a Langley science instrument mounted on the International Space Station.
By strapping on a headset, viewers could see the SAGE III (Stratospheric Aerosol Gas Experiment III)instrument as if they were taking a daring spacewalk outside the station.
“I got that visualization done in like the first month of my internship,” Odenwald said. “We had a bunch of public outreach events using that, getting people excited about VR because it is the future. And you can quote me on that.
“It's seems clear that it's going to be an increasing part of our lives.”
Growing up in nearby Chesapeake, Odenwald figured she would be a math teacher one day, not a virtual reality specialist.
Her older brother dreamed of becoming an engineer, but it was Christine who landed an internship at NASA Langley in the spring of 2017.
And today, she’s a 20-year-old modeling, simulation and visualization engineering major at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, while her brother teaches math in Roanoke.
Engineers try out virtual reality design software in NASA Langley's Engineering Design Studio.
During a test demonstration of virtual reality engineering design software, researchers try their hands at manipulating a model using hand controllers and virtual reality headsets. Standing in the foreground, NASA Langley’s Christopher Tarkenton, a project engineer, looks up at the model. In the background, Robert Mosher, a Langley aerospace engineer, tries out the system while intern Dakota Palmer leans over to guide him. “I think virtual reality would be very helpful toward improving designs early in the design process,” Mosher said.
Credits: NASA/David C. Bowman
“We kind of flipped,” Odenwald said, smiling. “I feel like we both kind of inspired each other.”
The Virginia Aerospace Science and Technology Scholars (VASTS) Program provided encouragement for both the young Odenwalds. As high schoolers, they attended separate sessions of that summer educational program at NASA Langley, run by the Virginia Space Grant Consortium.
“That motivated me to kind of see what this field was about and it turned out to be an excellent fit for me,” Christine said.
She gets high marks from folks she assisted during her internship.
“Working with Christine, I was immediately impressed with her ability to jump into software and hardware she’d never used before and get things working quickly,” said Joshua Kinne, a project manager in NASA Langley’s Science Flight Project Office. “I was even more impressed by how well she communicated the work she’d produced, no matter if the audience was a member of the public or a senior researcher who’d actually worked on the SAGE III project.”
Odenwald said her year at NASA was beneficial in many ways.
“Obviously, I am a better technical developer now, but, also, I've become such a better public speaker,” she said. During the internship, Odenwald was asked to be a presenter at a conference that included representatives from Johns Hopkins University and Newport News Shipbuilding. “I may be coming in like I'm young, I'm still a student, I'm still an intern, but I had a lot more confidence in myself and it's definitely something that I gained from this experience.”
Throughout the year, the virtual reality and augmented reality assignments kept coming.
View of what users of the M3 Multi-User Model Manipulation Tool see when looking through their virtual reality headsets.
These two images show views of what a person wearing the virtual reality headset would see while working with a 3D model. On top, the user sees the design for an antenna. With controllers he or she can move closer to the model, rotate it in any direction, or even see inside the structure. On bottom, the viewer has used the controls to see what’s called an exploded view of the object.
Credits: NASA
This spring, near the end of her internship, Odenwald was part of a team of interns that developed the M3 Multi-User Model Manipulation Tool. Using a content creation engine called Unity, Odenwald worked with interns including Dakota Palmer and Marcelino Dayrit to create a tool allowing engineers to upload their concepts so they could see and manipulate 3D versions of their designs for things like aircraft, spacecraft, satellites or atmospheric sensing instruments.
The goal is for multiple contributors to see and manipulate the model simultaneously to better collaborate on the design.
“They're able to move, scale, rotate the object,” Odenwald said. “They're able to see what's called exploded views. So, they click a button on a controller and then all the individual parts of the CAD (computer-aided design) objects will expand.”
The goal is rapid prototyping where different subject matter experts in different fields can instantly compare notes.
“Maybe they have different perspectives and they can see something that might be out of place for their particular expertise,” Odenwald said. “Boom, now they've identified a problem.”
Virtual reality projects like this have potential to help NASA become more agile and efficient.
“I feel like it's kind of changing the status quo, right?” Odenwald said. “That’s awesome. It’s an amazing feeling.”
Sam McDonald
NASA Langley Research Center
Last Updated: July 11, 2018
Editor: Samuel McDonald

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