Robert Ricks
Ames Research Center
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international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2005
Carsten W. Mundt; Kevin Montgomery; Usen E. Udoh; Valerie N. Barker; Guillaume Thonier; Arnaud Tellier; Robert Ricks; Robert B. Darling; Yvonne D. Cagle; Nathalie A. Cabrol; Stephen J. Ruoss; Judith L. Swain; John W. Hines; Gregory T. A. Kovacs
A novel, unobtrusive and wearable, multiparameter ambulatory physiologic monitoring system for space and terrestrial applications, termed LifeGuard, is presented. The core element is a wearable monitor, the crew physiologic observation device (CPOD), that provides the capability to continuously record two standard electrocardiogram leads, respiration rate via impedance plethysmography, heart rate, hemoglobin oxygen saturation, ambient or body temperature, three axes of acceleration, and blood pressure. These parameters can be digitally recorded with high fidelity over a 9-h period with precise time stamps and user-defined event markers. Data can be continuously streamed to a base station using a built-in Bluetooth RF link or stored in 32 MB of on-board flash memory and downloaded to a personal computer using a serial port. The device is powered by two AAA batteries. The design, laboratory, and field testing of the wearable monitors are described.
international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2004
Kevin Montgomery; Carsten W. Mundt; Guillaume Thonier; Arnaud Tellier; U. Udoh; V. Barker; Robert Ricks; Laurent Giovangrandi; P. Davies; Y. Cagle; Judith L. Swain; James J. Hines; Gregory T. A. Kovacs
Monitoring vital signs in applications that require the subject to be mobile requires small, lightweight, and robust sensors and electronics. A body-worn system should be unobtrusive, noninvasive, and easy-to-use. It must be able to log vital signs data for several hours as well as transmit it on demand in real-time using secure wireless technologies. The NASA Ames Research Center (Astrobionics) and Stanford University (National Center for Space Biological Technologies) are currently developing a wearable physiological monitoring system for astronauts, called LifeGuard, that meets all of the above requirements and is also applicable to clinical, home-health monitoring, first responder and military applications.
Astrobiology | 2011
Wayne L. Nicholson; Antonio J. Ricco; Elwood Agasid; Christopher Beasley; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Charles Friedericks; Shakib Ghassemieh; Michael Henschke; John W. Hines; Christopher Kitts; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Nghia Mai; Rocco L. Mancinelli; Michael McIntyre; Giovanni Minelli; Michael Neumann; Macarena Parra; Matthew Piccini; R. Mike Rasay; Robert Ricks; Orlando Santos; Aaron Schooley; David Squires; Linda Timucin; Bruce Yost; Anthony Young
We report the first telemetered spaceflight science results from the orbiting Space Environment Survivability of Living Organisms (SESLO) experiment, executed by one of the two 10 cm cube-format payloads aboard the 5.5 kg Organism/Organic Exposure to Orbital Stresses (O/OREOS) free-flying nanosatellite. The O/OREOS spacecraft was launched successfully to a 72° inclination, 650 km Earth orbit on 19 November 2010. This satellite provides access to the radiation environment of space in relatively weak regions of Earths protective magnetosphere as it passes close to the north and south magnetic poles; the total dose rate is about 15 times that in the orbit of the International Space Station. The SESLO experiment measures the long-term survival, germination, and growth responses, including metabolic activity, of Bacillus subtilis spores exposed to the microgravity, ionizing radiation, and heavy-ion bombardment of its high-inclination orbit. Six microwells containing wild-type (168) and six more containing radiation-sensitive mutant (WN1087) strains of dried B. subtilis spores were rehydrated with nutrient medium after 14 days in space to allow the spores to germinate and grow. Similarly, the same distribution of organisms in a different set of microwells was rehydrated with nutrient medium after 97 days in space. The nutrient medium included the redox dye Alamar blue, which changes color in response to cellular metabolic activity. Three-color transmitted intensity measurements of all microwells were telemetered to Earth within days of each of the 48 h growth experiments. We report here on the evaluation and interpretation of these spaceflight data in comparison to delayed-synchronous laboratory ground control experiments.
Astrobiology | 2012
Andrew Mattioda; Amanda Cook; Pascale Ehrenfreund; Richard C. Quinn; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Nathan Earl Bramall; Kathryn L. Bryson; Julie Diane Chittenden; Giovanni Minelli; Elwood Agasid; Lou Allamandola; Chris Beasley; Roland Burton; Greg Defouw; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Mark Fonda; Charles Friedericks; Christopher Kitts; David Landis; Mike McIntyre; Michael Neumann; Mike Rasay; Robert Ricks; Farid Salama; Orlando Santos; Aaron Schooley; Bruce Yost; Anthony Young
We report the first science results from the Space Environment Viability of Organics (SEVO) payload aboard the Organism/Organic Exposure to Orbital Stresses (O/OREOS) free-flying nanosatellite, which completed its nominal spaceflight mission in May 2011 but continues to acquire data biweekly. The SEVO payload integrates a compact UV-visible-NIR spectrometer, utilizing the Sun as its light source, with a 24-cell sample carousel that houses four classes of vacuum-deposited organic thin films: polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH), amino acid, metalloporphyrin, and quinone. The organic films are enclosed in hermetically sealed sample cells that contain one of four astrobiologically relevant microenvironments. Results are reported in this paper for the first 309 days of the mission, during which the samples were exposed for ∼2210 h to direct solar illumination (∼1080 kJ/cm(2) of solar energy over the 124-2600 nm range). Transmission spectra (200-1000 nm) were recorded for each film, at first daily and subsequently every 15 days, along with a solar spectrum and the dark response of the detector array. Results presented here include eight preflight and 16 in-flight spectra of eight SEVO sample cells. Spectra from the PAH thin film in a water-vapor-containing microenvironment indicate measurable change due to solar irradiation in orbit, while three other nominally water-free microenvironments show no appreciable change. The quinone anthrarufin showed high photostability and no significant spectroscopically measurable change in any of the four microenvironments during the same period. The SEVO experiment provides the first in situ real-time analysis of the photostability of organic compounds and biomarkers in orbit.
NASA/SPIE Conference on Spin-Off Technologies from NASA for Commercial Sensors and Scientific Applications | 1994
John W. Hines; Robert Ricks
Sensors 2000! (S2K!) is a specialized, high performance workgroup primarily organized to provide focused, directed, advanced biosensor and bioinstrumentation systems technology in support of NASAs life sciences spaceflight and ground-based research and development programs. A concurrent objective is to promote the mutual use, application, and transition of developed technology by collaborating in academiccommercial-government leveraging, joint research, technology utilization and commercialization, and strategic partnering alliances.
Archive | 1999
John W. Hines; Christopher J. Somps; Robert Ricks; Carsten W. Mundt
Acta Astronautica | 2014
Pascale Ehrenfreund; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Christopher Kitts; Elwood Agasid; Nathan Earl Bramall; Kathryn L. Bryson; Julie Diane Chittenden; Catharine A. Conley; Amanda Cook; Rocco L. Mancinelli; Andrew Mattioda; Wayne L. Nicholson; Richard C. Quinn; Orlando Santos; G. Tahu; M. Voytek; Chris Beasley; Laura Bica; Millan Diaz-Aguado; Charlie Friedericks; Mike Henschke; David Landis; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Nghia Mai; Giovanni Minelli; Mike McIntyre; Michael Neumann; Macarena Parra
Archive | 2007
Christopher Kitts; Karolyn Ronzano; Richard Rasay; Ignacio Mas; Phelps Williams; Paul Mahacek; Giovanni Minelli; John W. Hines; Elwood Agasid; Charlie Friedericks; Matthew Piccini; Macarena Parra; Linda Timucin; Christopher Beasley; Mike Henschke; Ed Luzzi; Nghia Mai; Mike McIntyre; Robert Ricks; David Squires; Chris Storment; John Tucker; Bruce Yost; Greg Defouw; Antonio J. Ricco
Archive | 2009
Christopher Kitts; Karolyn Ronzano; Richard Rasay; Ignacio Mas; Jose Acain; Michael Neumann; Laura Bica; Paul Mahacek; Giovanni Minelli; Erin Beck; Steve Li; Brian Gamp; Seamus Agnew; John Shepard; John W. Hines; Elwood Agasid; Charlie Friedericks; Matthew Piccini; Macarena Parra; Linda Timucin; Christopher Beasley; Mike Henschke; Ed Luzzi; Nghia Mai; Mike McIntyre; Robert Ricks; Antonio J. Ricco; David Squires; Greg Yost; Defouw
TRANSDUCERS 2007 - 2007 International Solid-State Sensors, Actuators and Microsystems Conference | 2007
Antonio J. Ricco; John W. Hines; Matthew Piccini; Macarena Parra; Linda Timucin; V. Barker; Chris Storment; Charlie Friedericks; Elwood Agasid; Chris Beasley; Laurent Giovangrandi; Mike Henschke; Christopher Kitts; L. Levine; Ed Luzzi; Diana Ly; Ignacio Mas; M. Mclntyre; D. Oswell; Richard Rasay; Robert Ricks; Karolyn Ronzano; David Squires; G. Swaiss; John Tucker; Bruce Yost