NASA

NASA
Author: Allen Li
Publisher: DIANE Publishing
Total Pages: 54
Release: 2002-07
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 9780756725402

Discusses the mechanisms that NASA has in place to capture, disseminate, and apply past lessons learned towards future mission success. It found that NASA's processes, procedures, and systems do not effectively capture and share lessons learned and therefore, NASA has no assurance that lessons are being applied towards future missions. The report includes recommendations to the NASA administrator on ways to strengthen the agency's learning processes and systems. It also includes two Appendices. Charts and tables.

Management

Management
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 730
Release: 1975
Genre: Industrial engineering
ISBN:

Architecture for Astronauts

Architecture for Astronauts
Author: Sandra Häuplik-Meusburger
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2011-10-18
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 3709106672

Living and working in extra-terrestrial habitats means being potentially vulnerable to very harsh environmental, social, and psychological conditions. With the stringent technical specifications for launch vehicles and transport into space, a very tight framework for the creation of habitable space is set. These constraints result in a very demanding “partnership” between the habitat and the inhabitant. This book is the result of researching the interface between people, space and objects in an extra-terrestrial environment. The evaluation of extra-terrestrial habitats in comparison to the user’s perspective leads to a new framework, comparing these buildings from the viewpoint of human activity. It can be used as reference or as conceptual framework for the purpose of evaluation. It also summarizes relevant human-related design directions. The work is addressed to architects and designers as well as engineers.

Workshop on Exercise Prescription for Long-Duration Space Flight

Workshop on Exercise Prescription for Long-Duration Space Flight
Author: Bernard A. Harris (Jr.)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 144
Release: 1989
Genre: Adaptation (Physiology)
ISBN:

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration has a dedicated history of ensuring human safety and productivity in flight. Working and living in space long term represents the challenge of the future. Our concerns are no longer getting a man into space but in determining the effects on the human body of living in space. Space flight provides a powerful stimulus for adaptation, such as cardiovascular and musculoskeletal deconditioning. Extended-duration space flight will influence a great many systems in the human body. We must understand the process by which this adaptation occurs. The NASA is agressively involved in developing programs which will act as a foundation for this new field of "space medicine." The hallmark of these programs deals with prevention of deconditioning, currently referred to as "countermeasures to zero g." Exercise appears to be most effective in preventing the cardiovascular and musculoskeletal degradation of microgravity. This document is a culmination of discussions from an exercise workshop held at the NASA Johnson Space Center. The proceedings from this session provide a comprehensive review of the physiology of exercise and recommendations on the use of exercise as a countermeasure for adaptation to a microgravity environment.