NASA Tests Lunar Habitat in Extreme Antarctic Environment

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Nov. 14, 2007

Melissa Mathews/Beth Dickey
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1272/2087
melissa.mathews-1@xxxxxxxx, beth.dickey-1@xxxxxxxx

Kelly Humphries/Lynnette Madison
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-244-5111
kelly.o.humphries@xxxxxxxx

RELEASE: 07-251

NASA TESTS LUNAR HABITAT IN EXTREME ANTARCTIC ENVIRONMENT

WASHINGTON - NASA will use the cold, harsh, isolated landscape of 
Antarctica to test one of its concepts for astronaut housing on the 
moon. The agency is sending a prototype inflatable habitat to 
Antarctica to see how it stands up during a year of use.

Agency officials viewed the habitat Wednesday at ILC Dover in 
Frederica, Del., as it was inflated one last time before being packed 
and shipped to Antarctica's McMurdo Station. NASA is partnering on 
the project with the National Science Foundation, Arlington, Va., 
which manages McMurdo Station, and ILC Dover, the company that 
manufactured the prototype structure. All three organizations will 
share data from the 13-month test, which runs from January 2008 to 
February 2009. An inflatable habitat is one of several concepts being 
considered for astronaut housing on the moon.

"Testing the inflatable habitat in one of the harshest, most remote 
sites on Earth gives us the opportunity to see what it would be like 
to use for lunar exploration," said Paul Lockhart, director of 
Constellation Systems for NASA's Exploration Systems Mission 
Directorate, Headquarters, Washington. 

NASA's Constellation Program is working to send humans back to the 
moon by 2020. After initial sorties, the astronauts will set up a 
lunar outpost for long-duration stays, and they will need a place to 
live. The agency is developing concepts for habitation modules that 
provide protection for the astronauts and are easy to transport to 
the lunar surface.

"To land one pound of supplies on the lunar surface, it'll require us 
to launch 125 pounds of hardware and fuel to get it there," Lockhart 
said. "So our habitation concepts have to be lightweight as well as 
durable. This prototype inflatable habitat can be taken down and 
redeployed multiple times, and it only takes four crew members a few 
hours to set up, permitting exploration beyond the initial landing 
area."

The structure looks something like an inflatable backyard bounce house 
for children, but it is far more sophisticated. It is insulated and 
heated, has power and is pressurized. It offers 384 square feet of 
living space and has, at its highest point, an 8-foot ceiling. During 
the test period, sensors will allow engineers to monitor the 
habitat's performance.

The National Science Foundation also is interested in lighter, 
easier-to-assemble habitats. It currently uses a 50-year-old design 
known as a Jamesway hut, which is bulky and complex in comparison to 
the habitat being tested. Modern variations on the Jamesway, although 
lighter, are still rigid and difficult to ship, with limited 
insulation. During the test of the new inflatable habitat, the 
foundation will study improvements in packing, transportation and set 
up, as well as power consumption and damage tolerance for this newest 
variation of the concept.

To enable lunar exploration, the Constellation Program is developing a 
new fleet of spacecraft and rockets, as well as transportation and 
power systems for use on the surface of the moon. More information 
about NASA's space exploration plans is available at:

http://www.nasa.gov/constellation

The inflatable habitat is being developed under NASA's Innovative 
Partnerships Program. For more information, visit:

http://www.ipp.nasa.gov

Video of the send-off event is expected to be available Thursday on 
the NASA Television Video File. For NASA TV downlink, schedule and 
streaming video information, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ntv

	
-end-



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