Strategies for the Design and Operation of Resilient Extraterrestrial HabitatsAn Earth-independent permanent extraterrestrial habitat system must function as intended under continuous disruptive conditions, and with significantly limited Earth support and extended uncrewed periods. Designing for the demands that extreme environments such as wild temperature fluctuations, galactic cosmic rays, destructive dust, meteoroid impacts (direct or indirect), vibrations, and solar particle events, will place on long-term deep space habitats represents one of the greatest challenges in this endeavor. This context necessitates that we establish the know-how and technologies to build habitat systems that are resilient. Resilience is not simply robustness or redundancy: it is a system property that accounts for both anticipated and unanticipated disruptions via the design choices and maintenance processes, and adapts to them in operation. We currently lack the frameworks and technologies needed to achieve a high level of resilience in a habitat system. The Resilient Extra Terrestrial Habitats Institute (RETHi) has the mission of leveraging existing novel technologies to provide situational awareness and autonomy to enable the design of habitats that are able to adapt, absorb and rapidly recover from expected and unexpected disruptions. We are establishing both fully virtual and coupled physical-virtual simulation capabilities that will enable us to explore a wide range of potential deep space Smart Hab configurations and operating modes.
Document ID
20220005431
Acquisition Source
2230 Support
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Shirley J Dyke (Purdue University West Lafayette West Lafayette, Indiana, United States)
Karen Marais (Purdue University West Lafayette West Lafayette, Indiana, United States)
Ilias Bilionis (Purdue University West Lafayette West Lafayette, Indiana, United States)
Justin Werfel (Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Ramesh Malla (University of Connecticut Storrs, Connecticut, United States)
Date Acquired
April 7, 2022
Publication Date
March 26, 2021
Publication Information
Publication: Proceedings of SPIE
Publisher: Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)