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| Lunar Living – The Next Giant
Leap |
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As part of the Vision for Space Exploration, NASA is dedicated to
the goal of returning to the moon before 2020. NASA envisions
short sorties at first, with longer expeditions of expanding scope
as experience grows.
The initial sortie missions will last up to seven days, performing
science investigations, resource utilization experiments and technology
demonstrations on the surface, before safely returning the crew
to Earth. Sortie missions could investigate diverse science sites,
or return to a single site to begin the deployment of a permanent
outpost. As the buildup of the outpost infrastructure is taking
place, mission duration would continue to be extended – from
initial outpost missions spanning an entire lunar day (28 Earth
days) to permanent crew rotations that eventually would grow to
six months on the lunar surface.
To begin to make living on the moon a reality, NASA is developing
two lowfidelity mockups at Johnson Space Center. These mockups will
lay the groundwork for engineers and scientists to evaluate various
options for future lunar habitats that will house astronauts. Using
these habitats, lunar crewmembers will embark upon missions to the
moon’s surface that will uncover more of the moon’s
mysteries, teach us how to use lunar resources and gather information
to aid in one of NASA’s longterm goals of sending humans to
Mars.
Lunar Sortie Mission
Lunar sortie missions of up to seven days will be conducted from
a lunar lander that will include a habitable crew cabin that will
support a short surface stay on the moon. The lander will provide
a small habitable area with basic galley, waste collection, sleep
berths, stowage and medical care capabilities. Lunar sortie missions
will establish the capability to conduct human exploration missions
to any location on the moon without a preexisting surface structure.
These missions might be used to conduct human exploration of potential
lunar outpost sites before more permanent surface infrastructure
is delivered.
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NASA's Constellation Program is getting to work on the new spacecraft
that will return humans to the moon and blaze a trail to Mars and
beyond. This artist's rendering represents a concept of a lunar
lander, lunar rover and astronauts on the moon's surface. Earth
is also visible in this rendering.
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Lunar Outpost Mission |
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For longer lunar missions that might range from one to six months,
a more permanent habitat is needed. The lunar outpost will allow
crews of up to four astronauts to conduct longduration surface
science, technology demonstrations, extended extravehicular activity
and the testing of operational techniques. The outpost habitat
would be delivered to a permanent surface location and provide
more robust crew accommodations than could be delivered on sortie
landers, including resource recycling and an overall larger habitat
volume. The outpost habitat will be reused over multiple expeditions,
and as a result will function during active periods when crew
is present, and be placed in a dormant mode when it is not in
use. Ultimately, the goal of the lunar outpost is continuous presence
of surface crews. |
Contacts at NASA Glenn Research Center
Project Manager: Timothy
E. Tyburski, NASA GRC
timothy.e.tyburski@nasa.gov
216-433-8616 |
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