Habitat Design Considerations for Implementing Solar Particle Event Radiation Protection
Author(s) -
Matthew Simon,
Steven A. Walker,
M. S. Clowdsley
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
43rd international conference on environmental systems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.2514/6.2013-3403
Subject(s) - event (particle physics) , habitat , environmental science , computer science , environmental resource management , architectural engineering , ecology , engineering , physics , quantum mechanics , biology
Radiation protection is an important habitat design consideration for human exploration missions beyond Low Earth Orbit. Fortunately, radiation shelter concepts can effectively reduce astronaut exposure for the relatively low proton energies of solar particle events, enabling moderate duration missions of several months before astronaut exposure (galactic cosmic ray and solar particle event) approaches radiation exposure limits. In order to minimize habitat mass for increasingly challenging missions, design of radiation shelters must minimize dedicated, single-purpose shielding mass by leveraging the design and placement of habitat subsystems, accommodations, and consumables. NASA's Advanced Exploration Systems RadWorks Storm Shelter Team has recently designed and performed radiation analysis on several low dedicated mass shelter concepts for a year-long mission. This paper describes habitat design considerations identified during the study's radiation analysis. These considerations include placement of the shelter within a habitat for improved protection, integration of human factors guidance for sizing shelters, identification of potential opportunities for habitat subsystems to compromise on individual subsystem performances for overall vehicle mass reductions, and pre-configuration of shelter components for reduced deployment times.
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