Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut

A categorized water usage study was undertaken at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station on Devon Island, Nunavut in the High Canadian Arctic. This study was conducted as part of a long duration four-month Mars mission simulation during the summer of 2007. The study determined that the crew of s...

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Main Authors: Bamsey, M., Berinstain, A., Auclair, S., Battler, M., Binsted, K., Bywaters, K., Harris, J., Kobrick, R. L., McKay, C.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SelectedWorks 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://works.bepress.com/ryinspace/21
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spelling ftembryriddleaun:oai:works.bepress.com:ryinspace-1020 2024-09-15T18:03:39+00:00 Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut Bamsey, M. Berinstain, A. Auclair, S. Battler, M. Binsted, K. Bywaters, K. Harris, J. Kobrick, R. L. McKay, C. 2009-04-01T07:00:00Z https://works.bepress.com/ryinspace/21 unknown SelectedWorks https://works.bepress.com/ryinspace/21 Ryan L. Kobrick Space Vehicles Systems Engineering and Multidisciplinary Design Optimization text 2009 ftembryriddleaun 2024-07-17T03:50:09Z A categorized water usage study was undertaken at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station on Devon Island, Nunavut in the High Canadian Arctic. This study was conducted as part of a long duration four-month Mars mission simulation during the summer of 2007. The study determined that the crew of seven averaged 82.07 L/day over the expedition (standard deviation 22.58 L/day). The study also incorporated a Mars Time Study phase which determined that an average of 12.12 L/sol of water was required for each crewmember. Drinking, food preparation, hand/face, oral, dish wash, clothes wash, shower, shaving, cleaning, engineering, science, plant growth and medical water were each individually monitored throughout the detailed study phases. It was determined that implementing the monitoring program itself resulted in an approximate water savings of 1.5 L/day per crewmember. The seven person crew averaged 202 distinct water draws a day (standard deviation 34) with high water use periods focusing around meal times. No statistically significant correlation was established between total water use and EVA or exercise duration. Study results suggest that current crew water utilization estimates for long duration planetary surface stays are more than two times greater than that required. Text Devon Island Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station Nunavut Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University: ERAU Scholarly Commons
institution Open Polar
collection Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University: ERAU Scholarly Commons
op_collection_id ftembryriddleaun
language unknown
topic Space Vehicles
Systems Engineering and Multidisciplinary Design Optimization
spellingShingle Space Vehicles
Systems Engineering and Multidisciplinary Design Optimization
Bamsey, M.
Berinstain, A.
Auclair, S.
Battler, M.
Binsted, K.
Bywaters, K.
Harris, J.
Kobrick, R. L.
McKay, C.
Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut
topic_facet Space Vehicles
Systems Engineering and Multidisciplinary Design Optimization
description A categorized water usage study was undertaken at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station on Devon Island, Nunavut in the High Canadian Arctic. This study was conducted as part of a long duration four-month Mars mission simulation during the summer of 2007. The study determined that the crew of seven averaged 82.07 L/day over the expedition (standard deviation 22.58 L/day). The study also incorporated a Mars Time Study phase which determined that an average of 12.12 L/sol of water was required for each crewmember. Drinking, food preparation, hand/face, oral, dish wash, clothes wash, shower, shaving, cleaning, engineering, science, plant growth and medical water were each individually monitored throughout the detailed study phases. It was determined that implementing the monitoring program itself resulted in an approximate water savings of 1.5 L/day per crewmember. The seven person crew averaged 202 distinct water draws a day (standard deviation 34) with high water use periods focusing around meal times. No statistically significant correlation was established between total water use and EVA or exercise duration. Study results suggest that current crew water utilization estimates for long duration planetary surface stays are more than two times greater than that required.
format Text
author Bamsey, M.
Berinstain, A.
Auclair, S.
Battler, M.
Binsted, K.
Bywaters, K.
Harris, J.
Kobrick, R. L.
McKay, C.
author_facet Bamsey, M.
Berinstain, A.
Auclair, S.
Battler, M.
Binsted, K.
Bywaters, K.
Harris, J.
Kobrick, R. L.
McKay, C.
author_sort Bamsey, M.
title Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut
title_short Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut
title_full Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut
title_fullStr Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut
title_full_unstemmed Four-Month Moon and Mars Crew Water Utilization Study Conducted at the Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station, Devon Island, Nunavut
title_sort four-month moon and mars crew water utilization study conducted at the flashline mars arctic research station, devon island, nunavut
publisher SelectedWorks
publishDate 2009
url https://works.bepress.com/ryinspace/21
genre Devon Island
Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station
Nunavut
genre_facet Devon Island
Flashline Mars Arctic Research Station
Nunavut
op_source Ryan L. Kobrick
op_relation https://works.bepress.com/ryinspace/21
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