Smart people | Live Smart

Dnipro, Dnipropetrovsk Region

The Challenge | Live Smart

Evaluate environmental, social, and economic data to design tools and plan blueprints for smart and connected rural and urban settlements.

Noath's Home

Cheap, safety, high quality and smart homes. This project suggests to be challenged with Tsunami.

Smart people

Project name: Live smart

Team members:

1) Mahmoud Elkady: postgraduate at faulty of physics and technology faculty, Dnipro, Ukraine. Participates in project "Live Smart" with autophage rocket and life-saving capsule.

2) Karolina Bechke: associated professor at faculty of physics and technology, Dnipro, Ukraine. Paticipates in project "Live Smart" with material science and material selecting.

3) Ilya Sakalovskiy: designer, geological prospecting, mining engineer. User interface developer, Nikopol, Ukraine. Paticipates in project "Live Smart" with data visualization and comfortable interior usability.

4) Nikita Zamula: 9th class pupil. School #99. Dnipro, Ukraine. Paticipates in project "Live Smart" with 3D printer infrastructure concept

Background:

Nowadays, Tsunami problem is not solved yet. Disaster debris are the most critical environmental problem faced by a tsunami-hit country.

Challenges faced:

Our team found a unique solution to solve this problem. This project matches investors thanks to its innovate concept. We assume to build new cheap, safety, high quality and smart homes which equipped with a life-saving capsule that will be fixed on autophage cheap rocket. This situation like spaceship.

Concept of smart evacuation:

We will have a femto or pico satellite on smart city with can assemble information from ocean and if finds any danger, then send SMS to people in smart city to ride-in capsule and to rocket for launching up to 8 km. The rocket turns to the side of Tsunami and parachute opens along 16 km and lands on ocean. The capsule also equipped with GPS through smart city's satellite could be found.

Resouces:

http://flood.umd.edu/

http://www.nasa.gov/landsat

http://landsat.usgs.gov

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/nasa-tracks-urban-change-and-flood-risk

https://earthdata.nasa.gov/earth-observation-data/near-real-time/hazards-and-disasters/floods

“Solar Power Satellites and Spaceplanes: The Skylon Initiative”, 2008, http://www.reactionengines.co.uk., accessible in October 2014.

Yemets, V., Sanin, F., Kostritsyn, O., Masliany, M., and Minteev, G. 2010. “Is the Combustible Inertial Pico Launch Vehicle Feasible?”, Journal of the British Interplanetary Society, Vol. 63, No. 7, July 2010.

Yemets, V., Motsyk, O., Prince, S., Wilkinson, R., Verhoeven, C., Dyukov, V., Minteev, G., Kostritsyn, O., Maslyany, M., Becker, C., Heldens, J., Krusharev, I., Olde, M., Sridharan, S., Werner, R., Yemets, T. and Yemets, M. September 2013. The infinite staging rocket – first step to realization. 63rd International Astronautical Congress, Beijing, China.

NASA Logo

SpaceApps is a NASA incubator innovation program.