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Internal Acoustics of the ISS and Other SpacecraftIt is important to control the acoustic environment inside spacecraft and space habitats to protect for astronaut communications, alarm audibility, and habitability, and to reduce astronauts' risk for sleep disturbance, and hear-ing loss. But this is not an easy task, given the various design trade-offs, and it has been difficult, historically, to achieve. Over time it has been found that successful control of spacecraft acoustic levels is achieved by levying firm requirements at the system-level, using a systems engineering approach for design and development, and then validating these requirements with acoustic testing. In the systems engineering method, the system-level requirements must be flowed down to sub-systems and component noise sources, using acoustic analysis and acoustic modelling to develop allocated requirements for the sub-systems and components. Noise controls must also be developed, tested, and implemented so the sub-systems and components can achieve their allocated limits. It is also important to have management support for acoustics efforts to maintain their priority against the various trade-offs, including mass, volume, power, cost, and schedule. In this extended abstract and companion presentation, the requirements, approach, and results for controlling acoustic levels in most US spacecraft since Apollo will be briefly discussed. The approach for controlling acoustic levels in the future US space vehicle, Orion Multipurpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV), will also be briefly discussed. These discussions will be limited to the control of continuous noise inside the space vehicles. Other types of noise, such as launch, landing, and abort noise, intermittent noise, Extra-Vehicular Activity (EVA) noise, emergency operations/off-nominal noise, noise exposure, and impulse noise are important, but will not be discussed because of time limitations.
Document ID
20170008857
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Allen, Christopher S.
(NASA Johnson Space Center Houston, TX, United States)
Date Acquired
September 18, 2017
Publication Date
November 19, 2017
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Acoustics
Man/System Technology And Life Support
Report/Patent Number
JSC-CN-40479
Meeting Information
Meeting: The Annual Conference of the Australian Acoustical Society 2017
Location: Perth
Country: Australia
Start Date: November 19, 2017
End Date: November 22, 2017
Sponsors: Australian Acoustical Society
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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