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Technological and Medical Human Health and Well-Being Options in Deep SpaceZeroth order, maintenance of human health requires supportive protection from the hazards of space, including supplying breathable air, comfortable temperatures, a supportive diet/nutrition, radiation protection, and sufficient gravity to avoid the combinatorial impacts of such effecting human operability and health. Spacecraft operability must be “fail-safe” to ensure these basic human life support conditions are maintained throughout the mission and the mission(s) must be affordable. There are known effects and unknowns effects regarding aspects of human health for Mars duration missions. Mars has the order of a third g. We have no data regarding the health impacts of this on humans or the combinatorial effects associated with 45% GCR on the Martian surface over time. There is a suspicion that if humans survive such conditions over long times they will evolve to living at reduced g and become “Martians”. Cascading failures and subcritical degradations in systems of systems causing an overall unrecoverable failure are a potential issue. There are two exremely complex systems associated with humans-Mars missions: the technical, engineering, and architectural system of systems that enable the mission and the humans. Both need to be mutually configured and operated to mitigate the overall risks and hazards of the mission. Regarding the humans that mitigation includes both the mission risks and supporting-to-increasing the human immune and other concomitant physiological systems. This report will summarize the risks, current mitigation approaches, and putative approaches including lifestyle, nutrition, and “wellness” approaches to possibly improve the human capacity to withstand the large number of combinatorial human physiological rigors of the missions. The wellness observations also apply to and are derived from Earth terrestrial applicable research.
Document ID
20230006053
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Technical Memorandum (TM)
Authors
Dennis M Bushnell
(Langley Research Center Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Leroy P Gross
(Inomedic Health Applications Hampton, Virginia, United States)
Date Acquired
April 19, 2023
Publication Date
May 1, 2023
Publication Information
Publisher: National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Report/Patent Number
NASA/TM-20230006053
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 981698.03.04.23.11
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80KSC020D0023
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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