Random positioning machine
Appearance
Other names | 3D clinostat |
---|---|
Uses | rotates biological samples around two independent axes to elimante the effect of gravity |
Inventor | T. Hoson |
Manufacturer | Dutch Space |
Related items | clinostat, free fall machine |
A random positioning machine, or RPM, rotates biological samples along two independent axes to change their orientation in space in complex ways and so eliminate the effect of gravity [1].
Description
The RPM is a more sophisticated development of the single axis clinostat. RPMs usually consist of two independently rotating frames. One frame is positioned inside the other giving a very complex net change of orientation to a biological sample mounted in the middle. So the RPM by some wrongly referred to as the 3-D clinostat, is a microweight ('microgravity') simulator that is based on the principle of 'gravity-vector-averaging'. RPM provides a functional volume which is 'exposed' to simulated microweight.
See also
References
- ^ Jack J.W.A. van Loon (2007). Some history and use of the random positioning machine, RPM, in gravity related research. Advances in Space Research 39: 1161-1165
2. A. G. Borst, J.J.W. A. van Loon. Technology and Developments for the Random Positioning Machine, RPM. Microgravity Sci. Technol., 2008. DOI 10.1007/s12217-008-9043-2
External links
- ETH Space Biology Random Positioning Machine
- DESC VU Amserdam Standard and desktop Random Positioning Machines