科技报告详细信息
Astronaut Mass Balance for Long Duration Missions
Ewert, Michael K ; Stromgren, Chel
关键词: ASTRONAUTS;    MASS DISTRIBUTION;    MATERIAL BALANCE;    LIFE SUPPORT SYSTEMS;    INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION;    WATER;    WATER BALANCE;    WATER TREATMENT;    METABOLISM;    OXYGEN;    CONSUMABLES (SPACECRAFT);    VARIABILITY;    WASTE MANAGEMENT;    HUMAN FACTORS ENGINEERING;    SPACE LOGISTICS;    MISSION PLANNING;   
RP-ID  :  ICES-2019-126,JSC-E-DAA-TN67810
学科分类:航空航天科学
美国|英语
来源: NASA Technical Reports Server
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【 摘 要 】
Human spaceflight logistics requirements are strongly driven by the daily living needs of the astronauts, including their biological functions. Oxygen, water and food are absolute requirements to sustain life and must be supplied at adequate rates. However, these rates can vary from day to day and from person to person. Beyond the body's immediate physical needs, water is also required for important health and hygiene functions within the spacecraft. Undesirable weight loss or gain aside, human waste product mass outputs will equal the inputs over time, resulting in an average astronaut mass balance. Best values, as well as range of variability for inputs and outputs are explored at both the individual physiological level and the spacecraft level. These values are important for design of life support and habitability systems as well as for mission planning of consumables. Current spacecraft life support systems are not fully closed loop, but the International Space Station (ISS) does recycle most of its air and water. The astronaut mass balances at the personal and vehicle level can have different impacts at different levels of system closure. Recommendations are made for a consistent set of values representing a realistic average astronaut mass balance over reasonable durations for exploration missions.
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