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New Sensor Finds Leaks in Spacecraft

Roland Piquepaille writes "With financial support from NASA, Iowa State University (ISU) engineers have developed a sensor to quickly find leaks in a spacecraft. This sensor locates an air leak by listening to the noise generated by the air rushing out of the leak and includes an array of 64 elements that detects vibrations as they radiate along the spacecraft. Because astronauts cannot hear the noise caused by escaping air, NASA needed to design a system to help them. As one ISU researcher said, 'NASA wants to be able to find these leaks. Fixing them is easy. But the question is, "Where is the leak?"' Now that this sensor has successfully been tested on the ground, NASA is evaluating a proposal to build a prototype of the leak detection system for future missions.

19 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. Another application. by GreggBz · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's also good for "who farted."

  2. If it find leaks... by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 4, Funny

    First customer: Steve Jobs

  3. Auto Patch by mdarksbane · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm curious what size of leak they're targetting here.

    I've heard an interesting suggestion for an automatic leak plugging system - floating, easily popped bags of quick drying sealent. Any leak will create air currents that will suck the bags into the holes, where they pop and seal the whole.

    This of course ignores all sorts of potential problems (holes in areas obscured by cables/ductwork, for one thing) but I thought it was neat anyway :)

    1. Re:Auto Patch by imsabbel · · Score: 2, Informative

      think of small leaks..
      They can be viciously hard to dedect, hat lose tons of air over a larger timeframe (and air isnt really replaceable up there).

      I work with vaccum chambers, where the same problem can happen (just inverted). And even having a rather good access to all parts, it can be terrible hard to find a leak without disassembling parts of the chamber. (Thats the reason you use helium and a mass spectrometer for leaktesting. Just hose down the thing and check where helium seeps through...)

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
  4. Not exactly new technology by Teun · · Score: 2, Informative

    This type of survey has been used in the oil industry since the 1980's...

    "noise log" leak detection

    But I have to admit this is 3D against 2D.

    --
    "The likes of Facebook and WhatsApp are free to those whose privacy is of zero value."
  5. KISS by Tank · · Score: 5, Funny

    I love tech as much as the next guy, but why not keep it simple... Submerge the craft in water, and look for bubbles. :D

    1. Re:KISS by jabber · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sure, but the cost of shipping all that water into orbit is prohibitive, and who has time to go around melting comets?

      --

      -- What you do today will cost you a day of your life.
    2. Re:KISS by Wite_Noiz · · Score: 2, Funny

      Professor Farnsworth: Dear Lord, that's over 150 atmospheres of pressure.
      Fry: How many atmospheres can this ship withstand?
      Professor Farnsworth: Well it's a spaceship, so I'd say anywhere between zero and one.

  6. Hippy Solution: by Penguinshit · · Score: 2, Funny

    Incense.

    Just follow the smoke... Good for karma and centering your Qi, too!

    1. Re:Hippy Solution: by Carbon016 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Our oxygen levels are way too low, what's going on, do we have a leak?" "Chill out guys, I'm just burning some incense, my spirit guide said we'll make it to the moon without oxygen anyway using the power of our minds." Sorry, I just thought the irony of burning oxygen to find an air leak intensely ironic.

  7. Been around since 1955 or so by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 2, Informative
    Ultrasonic leak detectors have been around since at least as far back as 1955.

    The telephone company (way back when there was just ONE big one, ATT), used to have like lots of copper wires running from pole to pole (way back when there were wires, and poles, and above-ground stringing).

    In the wetter climates the wires were covered in a lead casing (back when lead wasn't so despised). The lead "tubes" were pressurized to keep the moisture out. If the lead sheathing got a leak, a guy (back when telephone company people in the field were guys) would walk down the street holding up an ultrasonic microphone.

    A little box on his belt would map the ultrasonic frequencies down to the audible range and feed it to his headphones (back when headphones were big clunky black bakelite things).

  8. Re:Russians Are Better... by burni · · Score: 3, Informative

    Well in this case the simple solution might not be the best,
    because you will hardly see smoke moving towards the leak,
    and when you see you should run ;)

    Think of the ISS it's constructed from cylindrical elements, and you have a quadratic shaped interior, so the space gap is filled with computers (some Laptops == fan) possible cooled instrument racks which emmit heat (convection) and on the inner layer an insulation.

    If your presure- and ultrasoundsensors detect such a leak you have to generate
    smoke, this smoke will going to follow the airflow which is driven by presure diferences,
    but you also have temperaturdifferences or forced convection nearly everywere,
    even the astronauts moving will disturb the free flow extremly, and you have no
    gravition which helps you to settle the turbulences fast.

    The leak might be so tiny, so the volume flowing through it will not interfere with the inside
    atmosphere in deep.

  9. In Space No One Can Hear You Scream by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 3, Funny

    They can't mount this sensor outside the craft pointing in, because the intervening empty space carries no sound energy.

    But if they mount it internally, it could find not only leaks, but also target where that hideous alien creature is hiding after it's eaten the ship's cat.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:In Space No One Can Hear You Scream by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Interesting

      But only if there's enough gas to form a medium between the leak and the detector. Unless the entire surface is coated with the detector, then small leaks (with serious consequences over time) can't be detected. And coating with a sensor could use much cheaper and simpler tech.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  10. Re:soap by flyingfsck · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because in vacuum water boils and bubbles all on its own.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  11. A few clarifications by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    As one of the principal developers of this technique, I can clarify a few points:

    1. 99% of the leak noise escapes into the vacuum on the downstream side of the leak. Thus conventional industrial leak detection devices are much less effective for leaks into vacuum than for leaks into air.

    2. The real challenge is the extraction of the leak noise from other noise sources. We do this by recording cross-correlations of noise measured at different locations. Electronic (preamp) noise does not correlate and is rejected. Thus we can get far higher sensitivity than a single sensor.

    3. This device uses a piezo sensor with an array of multiplexed electrodes to sense the direction of sound propagation under the sensor. A 3D time-x-y Fourier transform maps the measured correlations from the time/space domain to the frequency/wavevector domain. The wavevector points precisely away from the leak, allowing us to find the leak through triangulation from two or more sensor arrays.

    4. For all you Linux fans, this sensor was developed entirely using open-source software. We used Linux with gEDA schematic capture and pcb.sourceforge.net for board layout. Lab measurements are done using the soon-to-be-published open-source Dataguzzler software on Linux x64.

    (Contact me for more information about Dataguzzler)

    5. One paper on this sensor, published in the journal Ultrasonics, vol 45 (2006) pp 121-126,
    can be found at http://thermal.cnde.iastate.edu/~sdh4/home/leakarray.pdf

              Stephen D. Holland
              Assistant Professor, Iowa State University

  12. Air is not the only sound-carrying medium by w.timmeh · · Score: 2, Informative

    The sound being picked up is not carried by air - it is the vibrations caused by the escaping air transmitted through the spacecraft itself.

  13. Re:Beats the old method... by Ajehals · · Score: 2, Funny

    Ground control to Major Tom:
    Your circuit's dead,
    there's something wrong.
    Can you hear me Major Tom....?

  14. In Space.. by monopole · · Score: 2, Funny

    Nobody can hear you leak! You need machines for that.