NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
NASA’s Top Human System Research and Technology Needs for MarsNASA is working with industry and international partners to return humans to the Moon and to eventually enable humans to explore Mars. Within NASA, several organizations work together to identify, prioritize, fund, execute, and operationalize the research and technology development (R&TD) that will be necessary to enable crew health and performance (CHP) during these future missions. These organizations include flight programs, the Health and Medical Technical Authority (HMTA), the Human Research Program, the Space Technology Mission Directorate, System Capability Leadership Teams, and other organizations, many of which existed for several years prior to the creation of the Moon-to-Mars (M2M) Program Office in 2023. A variety of constructs, vocabularies, and processes exist for managing risks and supporting strategic planning across these organizations. For example, M2M objectives, program risks, human system risks, human research gaps, capability gaps, and envisioned futures are all constructs currently used within NASA to identify and prioritize R&TD needs. These strategic planning constructs are evolving to allow M2M objectives and R&TD investments to be aligned and traced at a detailed level. A recognized need exists among stakeholder organizations to identify and communicate the highest CHP R&TD priorities in a unified and digestible way that addresses the perspectives of NASA’s CHP community. To achieve this, the HMTA arranged a series of discussions with representatives of NASA’s CHP community, during which the 8 highest priority CHP capabilities that will enable human missions to Mars, referred to as the “top human system capability needs for Mars”, were identified. The list includes Earth-independent human operations; Mars-duration food system; Mars-duration effects on human physiology; risk mitigations for vehicle atmospheres; computational injury and anthropometric models; exploration exercise countermeasures; individual variability in responses to spaceflight; and sensorimotor countermeasures. Existing tools and processes for strategic planning and risk management were evaluated, as well as the technical practicalities, cost, and schedule feasibility associated with potential R&TD investments in different capability need areas. This capability needs report is not owned by any one NASA organization and does not replace existing strategic or program planning processes; rather it aims to complement and inform them with a unified set of community generated priorities. These top capability needs will be re-evaluated periodically based on R&TD progress and the evolving M2M architecture.
Document ID
20240011669
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Andrew Abercromby
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
David Baumann
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Debbie Berdich
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
James Broyan
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Torin McCoy
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Sharmila Watkins
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Neal Zapp
(Johnson Space Center Houston, United States)
Date Acquired
September 12, 2024
Publication Date
October 14, 2024
Publication Information
Publisher: International Astronautical Federation (IAF)
Subject Category
Aerospace Medicine
Report/Patent Number
IAC-24-A5.2.1.x83357
Meeting Information
Meeting: 75th International Astronautical Congress (IAC)
Location: Milan
Country: IT
Start Date: October 14, 2024
End Date: October 18, 2024
Sponsors: International Astronautical Federation (IAF)
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 542193.12.10.10
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Technical Review
Single Expert
Keywords
technology gaps
crew health
Mars
human
spaceflight
research
technology
No Preview Available