dimanche 28 juin 2020

NASA calls for ideas for lunar toilets











NASA calls for ideas for lunar toilets logo.


June 28, 2020

Astronauts can already urinate and defecate when they float in space, but NASA is looking for smaller, more efficient concepts suited to low lunar gravity for its future missions to the Moon. It launched a call for projects on Thursday with $ 35,000 in prizes.

"This challenge hopes to spark radically new and different approaches to the problem of collecting and storing human waste," writes the US space agency in the technical prose it is used to.


Apollo astronauts were doing it in a bag (at least five have remained on the Moon, according to official records), and the toilets of the International Space Station are now working with systems of pipes and aspiration, weightlessness.

Three awards

NASA will give three prizes (20,000, 10,000 and 5,000 dollars) to the most creative inventors for a system to be installed in the landing gear which will bring two astronauts to the Moon by 2024, according to the official calendar ( three companies are competing to build the lander).

The specifications are specified: the toilets must of course be used for men and women, operate both on the Moon (where gravity is one sixth of the earth's gravity) and in microgravity (in space), occupy less 0.12 cubic meter, and make no more noise than a bathroom ventilation (60 decibels).


Above all, they should allow simultaneous defecation and urination, and be able to receive one liter of urine and 500 grams of feces (including diarrhea) per event, and 114 grams per menstrual day. They should be cleanable in five minutes, and contain odors and drops in the necessarily narrow interior of the vehicle.

Sparkling crystals

The waste must be able to be stored or evacuated outside (for Apollo, the urine was discharged into space, "where it immediately froze in a shower of sparkling ice crystals", according to author Craig Nelson).

Another detail for those who would be interested (deadline August 17): "Bonus points will be given to designs capable of collecting vomiting without requiring the crew member to put their head down the toilet."

For more information, visit: https://www.herox.com/LunarLoo

NASA’s Human Landing System Program: https://www.nasa.gov/content/more-about-the-human-landing-system-program

Artemis: https://www.nasa.gov/specials/artemis/

Images, Text, Credits: AFP/NASA/Orbiter.ch Aerospce/Roland Berga.

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