1. Apollo to Artemis: Mining 50-Year Old Records to Inform Future Human Lunar Landing Systems
- Author
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Petersen, D, Charvat, J, Somers, J, Pattarini, J, Stenger, M. B, Van Baalen, M, and Lee, S. M. C
- Subjects
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration - Abstract
Under the Artemis lunar exploration program, NASA is committed to landing American astronauts on the moon by 2024. While NASA’s new Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule will carry astronauts from Earth to the Gateway, the human lunar landing system has not yet been fully defined. As in the Apollo program, there are concerns for vehicle weight and internal volume such that seats may not be desirable, and standing during lunar descent and ascent may be a preferred engineering solution. With such a design, astronauts will experience +GZ (head-to-foot) accelerations during capsule accelerations, and it is unclear whether spaceflight deconditioned astronauts can tolerate these. Apollo astronauts stood during lunar descent and ascent, and the data contained in the early program records for those missions represent a unique resource that may provide insights to the cardiovascular stress associated with this human landing system design.
- Published
- 2020