NASA Uses Undersea Lab to Prep for Future Space Exploration

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July 6, 2006

Katherine Trinidad
Headquarters, Washington 
(202) 358-3749

Kylie S. Clem
Johnson Space Center, Houston
(281) 483-5111 

RELEASE: 06-276

NASA USES UNDERSEA LAB TO PREP FOR FUTURE SPACE EXPLORATION

NASA will test concepts for future space exploration next month by 
sending three astronauts and an oceanographer on a mission to an 
underwater laboratory off the coast of Florida. 

Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) astronaut Koichi Wakata will 
lead the crew on a seven-day undersea mission July 22 to 28 aboard 
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Aquarius 
underwater laboratory. NASA astronauts Andrew J. Feustel and Karen L. 
Nyberg, and Karen Kohanowich, deputy director of NOAA's Undersea 
Research Program, Silver Spring, Md., round out the crew. Mark 
Hulsbeck and Dominic Landucci of the University of North Carolina at 
Wilmington will provide engineering support. 

The NASA Extreme Environment Mission Operations (NEEMO) 10 project 
will include undersea extravehicular activities imitating moonwalks 
to test concepts for mobility, using weighted backpacks to simulate 
lunar and Martian gravity. Techniques for communication, navigation 
and using remote-controlled robots on the moon's surface also will be 
tested. 

"Whether walking and working on the ocean floor or exploring the lunar 
surface, significant prior planning, training and dependence on 
sophisticated life support systems is necessary," said NEEMO Project 
Manager Bill Todd, Johnson Space Flight Center (JSC), Houston. "Sure, 
you won't see any pretty fish on a moonwalk, but you will see the 
same types of crew, hardware and procedure challenges that are 
associated with this type of an ocean habitation and research 
mission." 

This mission also exemplifies the partnership between NASA and NOAA 
for NEEMO. 

"NOAA will use this opportunity to build on its undersea research 
efforts and interagency partnership successes," said Kohanowich. 

"Humans working both in space and under the ocean face similar 
challenges of lack of oxygen, weightlessness, remoteness, extreme 
pressure differentials and cramped quarters. Many techniques, 
technologies, and skills necessary to work underwater can be adapted 
for lunar research, and vice versa," Kohanowich stated. 

Aquarius is owned and funded by NOAA and operated by the University of 
North Carolina at Wilmington. This is the second of three NEEMO 
missions planned for this year. The work will be monitored at JSC's 
Exploration Planning Operations Center (ExPOC), Houston. The 
45-foot-long, 13-foot-diameter complex is three miles off Key Largo 
in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. It rests about 62 feet 
beneath the surface. A shore-based mission control center in Florida 
monitors the habitat and crew. 

Born in Saitama, Japan, Wakata reported to JSC in August 1992. He flew 
as the first Japanese mission specialist on the space shuttle mission 
STS-72 in January 1996. He flew to the space station on STS-92 in 
October 2000. Wakata has a Bachelor of Science, a Master of Science, 
and doctorate in aerospace engineering from Kyushu University, Japan. 


Selected as a mission specialist by NASA in July 2000, Feustel 
completed two years of initial training and evaluation before 
assignment to the Astronaut Office Space Shuttle and Space Station 
branches. He has an Associate Science degree from Oakland Community 
College in Michigan, a Bachelor of Science and a Master of Science 
from Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind., and a Ph.D. in 
geological sciences from Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, 
Canada. Feustel considers Lake Orion, Mich., his hometown. 

Selected as a mission specialist by NASA in July 2000, Nyberg 
considers Vining, Minn., her hometown. She served as crew support 
astronaut for Expedition 6 at the International Space Station and 
currently supports the Space Shuttle Branch and the Exploration 
Branch. She has a Bachelor of Science from the University of North 
Dakota, and a Master of Science and Ph.D. in mechanical engineering 
from the University of Texas at Austin. 

Kohanowich became the deputy director of NOAA's Undersea Research 
Program in April 2005. Previously she was a U.S. Navy deep sea diver 
and oceanographer and retired as a commander after 23 years of 
service. Early in her career, Kohanowich supported 1,000 FSW (feet of 
sea water) saturation dives at the Navy Experimental Diving Unit. 

To request interviews with the NEEMO 10 crew contact the JSC Newsroom 
at 281-483-5111. Additional points of contact: Kumiko Tanabe, JAXA, 
Houston at 281-483-2251 and Jana Goldman, NOAA, Silver Spring, Md., 
at 301-713-2483.

For information about NEEMO, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/neemo

	
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