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Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Ultrasonic Method For Aircraft Wake Vortex Detection, Rebecca J. Rodenhiser, William W. Durgin, Hamid Johari May 2007

Ultrasonic Method For Aircraft Wake Vortex Detection, Rebecca J. Rodenhiser, William W. Durgin, Hamid Johari

Office of the Provost Scholarship

This paper describes the experimental proof of concept study for an ultrasonic method of wake vortex detection. This new acoustic method uses travel time of acoustic pulses around a closed path to measure the net circulation within the acoustic path. In this application the closed path encloses the vorticity shed from one side of a Piper PA-28 aircraft wing. Magnitude and sign of circulation detected is comparable to the expected circulation generated by the Piper PA-28 test aircraft. This study demonstrates the validity of the acoustic method in detecting aircraft wake vortices. Further investigations and applications using this technique are …


Ultrasonic Method For Aircraft Wake Vortex Detection, Rebecca J. Rodenhiser, William W. Durgin, Hamid Johari Jan 2006

Ultrasonic Method For Aircraft Wake Vortex Detection, Rebecca J. Rodenhiser, William W. Durgin, Hamid Johari

Office of the Provost Scholarship

This paper describes the experimental proof of concept study for an ultrasonic method of wake vortex detection for airport use. This new acoustic method utilizes travel time of acoustic pulses around a closed path to measure the net circulation within the acoustic path. In this application the closed path encloses the vorticity shed from one side of a Piper PA28 aircraft wing. Magnitude and sign of circulation detected is comparable to the expected circulation generated by the Piper PA28 test aircraft. This study demonstrates the validity of the acoustic method in detecting aircraft wake vortices. Further investigations and applications utilizing …


Experimental Investigation Of The Travel-Time Variance Of An Acoustic Wave Propagating Through The Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin Aug 2005

Experimental Investigation Of The Travel-Time Variance Of An Acoustic Wave Propagating Through The Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin

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An experimental technique for the investigation of the behaviour of acoustic wave propagation through a turbulent medium is discussed. The present study utilizes the ultrasonic travel-time technique to diagnose a grid-generated turbulence. Travel-time variance is studied versus mean flow velocity, travel distance and outer turbulence scale. The effect of thermal fluctuations, which result in fluctuations of sound speed, is studied using a heated-grid experiment. Experimental data obtained using ultrasonic technique confirm numerical and theoretical predictions of nonlinear increase of the travel-time variance with propagation distance, which could be connected to the occurrence of caustics. The effect of turbulent intensity on …


Effect Of Chaos And Stochastics Induced By Internal Waves On Acoustic Wave Propagation, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin Jun 2005

Effect Of Chaos And Stochastics Induced By Internal Waves On Acoustic Wave Propagation, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

In the present paper the eikonal equation is considered in the form of a second order, nonlinear ordinary differential equation with harmonic excitation due to internal wave. The harmonic excitation is taken imperfect, i.e. there is a random phase modulation due to Gaussian white noise. The amplitude and wavelength of the acoustic wave are used as the principle signal characteristics in bifurcation analysis. The regions of instability, identified using the bifurcation diagrams, examined through phase diagrams and Poincare maps. The effect of stochastic nature in addition to chaotic one of internal waves is demonstrated by means of comparison of the …


Experimental Investigation Of Statistical Moments Of Travel Time In Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, S. B. Meleshi, William W. Durgin Jan 2004

Experimental Investigation Of Statistical Moments Of Travel Time In Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, S. B. Meleshi, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

An experimental technique for investigation of the behavior of acoustic wave propagation through a turbulent medium is discussed. The present study utilizes the ultrasonic travel-time technique to diagnose a grid-generated turbulence. The statistics of the travel-time variations of ultrasonic wave propagation along a path are used to determine some metrics of the turbulence. Experimental data obtained using ultrasonic technique confirms numerical and theoretical predictions of nonlinear increase of the first-order travel time variance with propagation distance.


Ultrasound Technique For Prediction Of Statistical Characteristics Of Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin Aug 2003

Ultrasound Technique For Prediction Of Statistical Characteristics Of Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

Ultrasonic measurement techniques can be used to determine some characteristics of turbulent flows. In this work measurements of the difference in propagation times of ultrasonic waves along two paths are combined with the Kolmogorov (2/3)-power law to study characteristics of grid-generated turbulence. The paper focuses on ultrasonic measurements of turbulent flow using the travel-time technique. The present research is of interest from two points of view. First, it demonstrates an ultrasonic method of investigation of turbulence, and second, it furthers understanding of the effect of turbulence on sound propagation.


Ultrasonic Flowmeters In Determination Of Correlation Functions Of Velocity And Ultrasound Wave Fluctuations In Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin May 2003

Ultrasonic Flowmeters In Determination Of Correlation Functions Of Velocity And Ultrasound Wave Fluctuations In Grid-Generated Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin

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The paper is devoted to the experimental investigation of the statistical characteristics of the grid-generated turbulence produced in a wind tunnel. Ultrasonic time-of-flight method using dual transducers is utilized to develop a methodology for determination of the correlation functions of turbulent velocity and sound speed fluctuations. The ultrasonic flowmeter equation is considered in the form that includes effects of turbulent velocity and sound speed fluctuations. The influence of temperature inhomogeneities on ultrasonic wave propagation is investigated using a set of experiments with a heated grid. Utilization of high-speed digital data acquisition cards and LabView software for the experiments allows collecting …


Ultrasonic Technique For Investigation Of The Effect Of Grid-Generated Turbulence On Sound Wave Propagation, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin Jan 2003

Ultrasonic Technique For Investigation Of The Effect Of Grid-Generated Turbulence On Sound Wave Propagation, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

This paper concerns an experimental study of the effects of the grid-generated turbulence on the propagation of acoustical waves in a wind tunnel. Turbulence effects are investigated using ultrasound time-of-flight method, employing counter-propagating ultrasonic pulses. Turbulence effects are an important source of error in the active probing of the atmosphere using sound sources. The emphasis is on the propagation time fluctuations and their interpretation using theoretical analysis of Kolmogorov.


The Wpi/Goddard Space Flight Center Projects Program, Fred J. Looft, William W. Durgin Nov 2002

The Wpi/Goddard Space Flight Center Projects Program, Fred J. Looft, William W. Durgin

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The WP/IGSFC (Goddard Space Flight Center) Projects Program is an off-campus, multi-disciplinary opportunity for students to complete their capstone design project requirement during 10 weeks of on-site project work. Students accepted into this program are required to spend one term in a project preparation course where they carry out background research, interact with their project mentor(s) at the space center, and write a detailed project proposal. At the completion of the preparation course and several weeks before the start of the following academic year, the students relocate to the Washington area and work full time for ten weeks on their …


Educating Engineering Students In Entrepreneurship, William W. Durgin, Donald N. Zwiep Oct 2002

Educating Engineering Students In Entrepreneurship, William W. Durgin, Donald N. Zwiep

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Since it’s founding in 1865, the faculty, students, and alumni of Worcester Polytechnic Institute have been responsible for the establishment of nearly all the manufacturing industry in the region. Beginning with the Norton Company, a world-wide abrasives manufacturer now owned by Saint Gobain, to recent biotechnology companies, they have combined confidence, innovation, and resourcefulness to continuously accomplish what is now referred to as technology transfer to form start-up companies. By following the historical development of these firms, we seek to determine some of the traits and environmental factors that have fostered the continual entrepreneurial success of the founders.

Worcester Polytechnic …


Stability And Heat Transfer Characteristics Of Condensing Films, James C. Hermanson, Peder C. Pedersen, Jeffrey S. Allen, M. A. Shear, Z. Q. Chen, Andreas N. Alexandrou, William W. Durgin Aug 2002

Stability And Heat Transfer Characteristics Of Condensing Films, James C. Hermanson, Peder C. Pedersen, Jeffrey S. Allen, M. A. Shear, Z. Q. Chen, Andreas N. Alexandrou, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Determination Of Statistical Characteristics Of Isotropic Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin, F. J. Weber, Hamid Johari May 2001

Determination Of Statistical Characteristics Of Isotropic Turbulence, Tatiana A. Andreeva, William W. Durgin, F. J. Weber, Hamid Johari

Office of the Provost Scholarship

Ultrasonic flow measurement technology has the potential to significantly improve flow measurement accuracy beyond that presently achieved. However, current applications fail to achieve theoretical accuracies because of turbulence effects on ultrasonic wave transit time. Herein, the ultrasonic flowmeter equation is reconsidered, where the effects of turbulent velocity and sound speed fluctuations are included. The result is an integral equation for the corresponding correlation functions. In this paper experimental velocity data are used to solve this integral equation analytically. As a result, some statistical characteristics of the turbulent flow are developed and can explain the limitations of measurement accuracy observed in …


Ultrasonic Beam Propagation In Turbulent Flow, William W. Durgin, F. J. Weber, Hamid Johari May 2001

Ultrasonic Beam Propagation In Turbulent Flow, William W. Durgin, F. J. Weber, Hamid Johari

Office of the Provost Scholarship

A study was conducted to examine how a coherent sound burst, such as those used in an ultrasonic flowmeter, crosses a turbulent flow field. Many ultrasonic flowmeters use a time of flight method to determine the mean flow. This measurement method sends sound waves at some angle across a velocity field between two transducers, and the time required for the sound burst to cross this distance is measured on the order of nanoseconds. The system then reverses so that the sound wave burst is sent in the opposite direction. Knowing the distance traveled, the local average sound speed, and the …


Global Projects Prepare Wpi Students For The 21st Century, William W. Durgin, Donald N. Zwiep Oct 2000

Global Projects Prepare Wpi Students For The 21st Century, William W. Durgin, Donald N. Zwiep

Office of the Provost Scholarship

The WPI project based curriculum, which emphasizes discovery based learning are an alternative to the traditional information transfer process, has proved successful in delivering global engineering education. More than 25% of the learning process of the students is integrated into two formal projects, the Major Qualifying Project (MQP) which is designed as a capstone for professional technical competence and the Interactive Qualifying Project (IQP) which relates science and technology to societal concerns and student needs. Both the MQP and IQP may be completed on- or off-campus. Currently, over 50% of the graduating class will have completed one of the projects …


Stability And Heat Transfer Characteristics Of Condensate Fluid Layers In Reduced Gravity, James C. Hermanson, Andreas N. Alexandrou, William W. Durgin, Peder C. Pedersen, Jeffrey S. Allen Aug 2000

Stability And Heat Transfer Characteristics Of Condensate Fluid Layers In Reduced Gravity, James C. Hermanson, Andreas N. Alexandrou, William W. Durgin, Peder C. Pedersen, Jeffrey S. Allen

Office of the Provost Scholarship

The focus of this ground-based program is the study of film condensation phenomena under variable, reduced-gravity conditions. Experimental tests, combined with numerical modeling, are employed to gain an improved understanding of the fundamental fluid physics responsible for condensate film growth, film instability and the resulting interfacial motion under variable gravity, and the corresponding implications for heat transfer. There has been relatively little research on the mechanisms operative at the film interface between condensed liquid and its vapor under reduced gravity conditions. Of particular interest are the stability characteristics of the condensate layer, and how they differ from those of films …


Ultrasonic Monitoring Method And System For Wake Turbulence Useful At Runways, Hamid Johari, William W. Durgin May 2000

Ultrasonic Monitoring Method And System For Wake Turbulence Useful At Runways, Hamid Johari, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

Two techniques for detecting vortices and their associated circulation are disclosed. The first is termed a closed path configuration, and the second is termed the dual path configuration. These techniques are useable for the detection of wake turbulence especially in the vicinity of airport runways, which results from wing tip vortices generated by aircraft during take-off and landing. The systems are similar in that they use ultrasonic measurement techniques to determine the circulation about defined areas. The circulation is reflective of the vorticity associated with trailing vortices, which are manifest within the area.


Collaborative Undergraduate Research, Hamid Davoodi, Frederick Just, Ali Saffar, Mohammad Noori, William W. Durgin Nov 1999

Collaborative Undergraduate Research, Hamid Davoodi, Frederick Just, Ali Saffar, Mohammad Noori, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

A joint undergraduate research project between University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez (UPRM) and Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) started four years ago. Each year a group of students, varying between six and ten, from WPI will come to Puerto Rico to work with a group of students, varying from six to ten, from UPRM on a well defined research project. Although the topics of the projects have been different but all follow the same goal, Vibration Control of Structures by Utilizing Shape Memory Alloys. Each year the project starts on January and ends on May. Both groups of the students …


Redesigning Engineering Education, William W. Durgin, Edward A. Parrish Jun 1998

Redesigning Engineering Education, William W. Durgin, Edward A. Parrish

Office of the Provost Scholarship

In developing the PLAN, WPI sought to address concerns inherent to its then traditional curriculum that was rigid, unresponsive to differences among students, and was compartmentalized by independent departments so that intellectual growth was fragmented.

The PLAN was an entirely new and different educational program responsive to the needs of students and society while nurturing sensitivity to the ideas and values of our society. It included fundamental departures from the traditional elements of technical education including:
A. The achievement of competence rather than the accumulation of credits.
B. Individual freedom and responsibility in planning the program of study.
C. A …


The Restoration Of A Wwii Avenger Provides Projects For Wpi Students, Donald N. Zwiep, William W. Durgin, Nathan H. Mayo Jan 1998

The Restoration Of A Wwii Avenger Provides Projects For Wpi Students, Donald N. Zwiep, William W. Durgin, Nathan H. Mayo

Office of the Provost Scholarship

In 1970 WPI completely revised its traditional approach to engineering education. The resulting program, the WPI Plan, emphasized the use of projects as a distinctive process for achieving educational goals. Every student, as a degree requirement, had to successfully complete two major projects: one in a student's major field, the Major Qualifying Project (MQP) and the second, the Interactive Qualifying Project (IQP), which related science and technology to societal issues.

The IQP's related to the restoration of the WWII Avenger at Mayocraft, Inc. for the Collings Foundation in Stow, Massachusetts enabled the students working with the authors as advisors to …


Development Of Outcome Assessments At Wpi, William W. Durgin, Lance Schachterle Nov 1996

Development Of Outcome Assessments At Wpi, William W. Durgin, Lance Schachterle

Office of the Provost Scholarship

The WPl PLAN, adopted by the WPl faculty in 1970, strongly anticipates current thinking about student outcomes assessments by structuring degree requirements that mandate that students demonstrate their ability to perform professional functions embodied in ABET Criteria 2000, especially Criteria 3 and 4. The WPI faculty has also practiced both student and self evaluations of these outcomes through respectively grades and peer review (both departmental and campus-wide) of student performance.


Solute Nucleation And Growth In Supercritical Fluid Mixtures, Gregory T. Smedley, Gerald Wilemski, W. Terry Rawlins, David B. Oakes, Prakash Joshi, William W. Durgin Jul 1996

Solute Nucleation And Growth In Supercritical Fluid Mixtures, Gregory T. Smedley, Gerald Wilemski, W. Terry Rawlins, David B. Oakes, Prakash Joshi, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

This research effort is directed toward two primary scientific objectives: (1) to determine the gravitational effect on the measurement of nucleation and growth rates near a critical point and (2) to investigate the nucleation process in supercritical fluids to aid in the evaluation and development of existing theoretical models and practical applications. A nucleation pulse method will be employed for this investigation using a rapid expansion to a supersaturated state that is maintained for ≈ 1 ms followed by a rapid recompression to a less supersaturated state that effectively terminates nucleation while permitting growth to continue. Nucleation, which occurs during …


Modeling Of Macroscopic/Microscopic Transport Phenomena In Zeolite Crystal Solutions Under Microgravity Conditions, Andreas Alexandrou, Nikos A. Gatsonis, William W. Durgin, Albert Sacco, Jr. Jun 1996

Modeling Of Macroscopic/Microscopic Transport Phenomena In Zeolite Crystal Solutions Under Microgravity Conditions, Andreas Alexandrou, Nikos A. Gatsonis, William W. Durgin, Albert Sacco, Jr.

Office of the Provost Scholarship

Crystals grown from special liquid solutions find important industrial applications. Most often the physics and chemistry of the growth processes are not well understood due to complex microscopic chemical and thermo-fluid phenomena. Microgravity could help elucidate these phenomena and allow the control of defect concentration and crystal size. We are proposing to study zeolites grown in silica solutions as a typical crystal growth system. By using macroscopic fluid dynamics, coupled with first-principle microscopic fluid physics and advanced particle simulations, we will study: (a) the effect of transport phenomena and nutrient flow under microgravity conditions along with (b) the nucleation process …


Circulation Measurements About A Rapidly Pitching Airfoil Using An Ultrasonic System, F. J. Weber, Jr., William W. Durgin, H. Johari Jun 1995

Circulation Measurements About A Rapidly Pitching Airfoil Using An Ultrasonic System, F. J. Weber, Jr., William W. Durgin, H. Johari

Office of the Provost Scholarship

An ultrasonic system was developed to measure the circulation about a sinusoidally pitching NACA 4418 airfoil. The system consisted of two opposing ultrasonic ranging modules arranged such that the differences between the sound propagation times in opposite directions could be related to the instantaneous circulation. For the stationary airfoil, the measured lift coefficient was within 5% of the tabulated data while the observed stall angle was 2° less than the tabulated value. Measured hysteresis loops verified the applicability of the ultrasonic system to the dynamic stall problem. Measured maximum lift coefficients increased linearly with reduced frequency up to a value …


Transient Flowmeter Calibration Facility, Paul J. Lefebvre, William W. Durgin Aug 1993

Transient Flowmeter Calibration Facility, Paul J. Lefebvre, William W. Durgin

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An apparatus for defining the free surface of a moving column of a fluid in a vertical pipe to enhance the accuracy of measurements of transient rate of flow of the fluid using electromagnetic flowmeter is described. It provides a neutrally buoyant plug which stays in contact with the free surface of the column of the fluid at all times and thus defines the free surface of the fluid moving in the vertical pipe accurately and reduces the oscillations of the free surface of the fluid.


Advanced Aeronatics Design: Project Based Engineering Education At Wpi, D. J. Olinger, William W. Durgin, Andreas N. Alexandrou Aug 1993

Advanced Aeronatics Design: Project Based Engineering Education At Wpi, D. J. Olinger, William W. Durgin, Andreas N. Alexandrou

Office of the Provost Scholarship

One element of WPI's project-based curriculum is its interdisciplinary Advanced Aeronautics Design Program. Students participating in the program are involved in the design, construction, and flight testing of non-traditional aircraft such as an ultralight solar-powered vehicle, microwave-powered long endurance aircraft, or a flying oblique wing. The WPI project philosophy and character are described and illustrated using examples from the AAD program.


Measurement Of The Nonsteady Flow Field In The Opening Of A Resonating Cavity Excited By Grazing Flow, Hans R. Graf, William W. Durgin May 1993

Measurement Of The Nonsteady Flow Field In The Opening Of A Resonating Cavity Excited By Grazing Flow, Hans R. Graf, William W. Durgin

Office of the Provost Scholarship

Flow past the opening of a cavity can excite acoustic resonance. The periodic velocity field in the region of the cavity opening has been measured for various flow conditions and the vorticity distribution has been computed from the measured data using numerical differentiation. The results indicate that the shear layer rolls up into discreet vortices, which travel across the cavity opening. Two resonances were found. The first is characterized by a single vortex being present and results in the greatest amplitude. The second is characterized by the presence of two vortices which excite a distinct but lesser amplitude resonance. As …


Low Gravity Environment On-Board Columbia During Sts-40, M. J.B. Rogers, C. R. Baugher, R. C. Blanchard, R. Delombard, William W. Durgin, D. H. Matthiesen, W. Neupert, P. Roussel Jan 1993

Low Gravity Environment On-Board Columbia During Sts-40, M. J.B. Rogers, C. R. Baugher, R. C. Blanchard, R. Delombard, William W. Durgin, D. H. Matthiesen, W. Neupert, P. Roussel

Office of the Provost Scholarship

The first NASA Spacelab Life Sciences mission (SLS-1) flew 5 June to 14 June 1991 on the orbiter Columbia (STS-40). The purpose of the mission was to investigate the human body's adaptation to the low gravity conditions of space flight and the body's readjustment after the mission to the 1 g environment of earth. In addition to the life sciences experiments manifested for the Spacelab module, a variety of experiments in other scientific disciplines flew in the Spacelab and in Get Away Special (GAS) Canisters on the GAS Bridge Assembly. Several principal investigators designed and flew specialized accelerometer systems to …


A Comparison Of Low-Gravity Measurements On-Board Columbia During Sts-40, M. J.B. Rogers, C. R. Baugher, R. C. Blanchard, R. Delombard, William W. Durgin, D. H. Matthiesen, W. Neupert, P. Roussel Jan 1993

A Comparison Of Low-Gravity Measurements On-Board Columbia During Sts-40, M. J.B. Rogers, C. R. Baugher, R. C. Blanchard, R. Delombard, William W. Durgin, D. H. Matthiesen, W. Neupert, P. Roussel

Office of the Provost Scholarship

The first NASA Spacelab Life Sciences mission (SLS-1) flew 5 June to 14 June 1991 on the orbiter Columbia (STS-40). The purpose of the mission was to investigate the human body's adaptation to the low-gravity conditions of space flight and the body's readjustment after the mission to the 1 g environment of earth. In addition to the life sciences experiments manifested for the Spacelab module, a variety of experiments in other scientific disciplines flew in the Spacelab and in Get Away Special (GAS) Canisters on the GAS Bridge Assembly. Several principal investigators designed and flew specialized accelerometer systems to better …


Flow Excited Acoustic Resonance In A Deep Cavity: An Analytical Model, William W. Durgin, Hans R. Graf Nov 1992

Flow Excited Acoustic Resonance In A Deep Cavity: An Analytical Model, William W. Durgin, Hans R. Graf

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Flow past the opening of a deep cavity can excite and sustain longitudinal acoustic modes resulting in large pressure fluctuations and loud tone generation. An analytic model of the interaction of the free stream with the acoustic flow field using concentrated vortices in the shear layer is proposed. The model includes a computation of the power transferred by the traveling vortices to the acoustic oscillation in the cavity. Experimentally measured values for the vortex convection velocity and phase are used to enable calculation of the ensuing oscillation amplititude and frequency ratio. The radiated acoustic power is calculated using the model …


Spaceflight Payload Design, Flight Experience G-408, William W. Durgin, Fred J. Looft, Albert Sacco, Jr., Robert Thompson, Anthony G. Dixon, Dino Roberti, Robert Labonte, Larry Moschini Oct 1992

Spaceflight Payload Design, Flight Experience G-408, William W. Durgin, Fred J. Looft, Albert Sacco, Jr., Robert Thompson, Anthony G. Dixon, Dino Roberti, Robert Labonte, Larry Moschini

Office of the Provost Scholarship

Worcester Polytechnic Institute's first payload of spaceflight experiments flew aboard Columbia, STS-40, during June of 1991 and culminated eight years of work by students and faculty. The Get Away Special (GAS) payload was installed on the GAS bridge assembly at the aft end of the cargo bay behind the Spacelab Life Sciences (SLS-l) laboratory. The experiments were turned on by astronaut signal after reaching orbit and then functioned for 72 hours. Environmental and experimental measurements were recorded on three cassette tapes which, together with zeolite crystals grown on orbit, formed the basis of subsequent analyses.

The experiments were developed over …