NASA's Fiber Optic Sensing System Webinar
Innovators at NASA's Armstrong Flight Research Center have developed a lightweight, robust fiber optic sensing system (FOSS) that represents a major breakthrough in sensing technology. The sensors, along with NASA's sophisticated algorithms, can be used to calculate a variety of critical parameters including shape, stress, temperature, pressure, strength, and operational load. This state-of-the-art sensor system is small, lightweight, easy to install, and fast—it processes information at rates of 100 times per second. For the first time ever, real-time strain measurements can be used to determine the shape of an aircraft's wing, monitor the structural integrity of bridges and pipelines, or ensure precise placement of the tiniest catheters, to name just a few potential applications. For more information on the technology, please click here: https://technology.nasa.gov/patent/DR... During the webinar, you will learn about this new technology and how NASA’s technologies and capabilities are available to industry and other organizations through NASA’s Technology Transfer Program.

Fiber Optic Sensors for Structural Health Monitoring

NASA's Next Generation Closed Strayton Engine Design Webinar

When AI Agents Go Wrong — What Every Beginner Needs to Know Before They Trust One

Fiber Optics in the Grid, Today and Tomorrow

NASA's Biocybernetics Technologies Webinar

Exposing The Solid State Donut Battery. It's Over.

How to make 3D Games in Godot

Spectromarine: A Path from Lab to Market in the Water Sector

The $200M Machine that Prints Microchips: The EUV Photolithography System

How AI Cracked the Protein Folding Code and Won a Nobel Prize

But what is the Fourier Transform? A visual introduction.

NASA's Advanced Solid State Metal Additive and Extrusion Technology Webinar

Transformers, the tech behind LLMs | Deep Learning Chapter 5

Sano Seminars – "Sano Centre posters at the KU KDM 2026"

The Unity Tutorial For Complete Beginners

The Insane Engineering of MRI Machines

What do tech pioneers think about the AI revolution? - The Engineers, BBC World Service

How ASML Makes Chips Faster With Its New $400 Million High NA Machine

Optical Fiber Sensor Installation

