首页> 外文会议>International astronautical congress;IAC 2009 >21st CENTURY EXTRAVEHICULAR ACTIVITIES: SYNERGIZING PAST AND PRESENT TRAINING METHODS FOR FUTURE SPACEWALKING SUCCESS
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21st CENTURY EXTRAVEHICULAR ACTIVITIES: SYNERGIZING PAST AND PRESENT TRAINING METHODS FOR FUTURE SPACEWALKING SUCCESS

机译:21世纪的车载运动:未来空间漫游成功的协同过去和当前训练方法

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Neil Armstrong's understated words, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind." were spoken from Tranquility Base forty years ago. Even today, those words resonate in the ears of millions, including many who had yet to be born when man first landed on the surface of the moon. By their very nature, and in the true spirit of exploration, extravehicular activities (EVAs) have generated much excitement throughout the history of manned spaceflight. From Ed White's first space walk in June of 1965, to the first steps on the moon in 1969, to the expected completion of the International Space Station (ISS), the ability to exist, live and work in the vacuum of space has stood as a beacon of what is possible. It was NASA's first spacewalk that taught engineers on the ground the valuable lesson that successful spacewalking requires a unique set of learned skills. That lesson sparked extensive efforts to develop and define the training requirements necessary to ensure success. As focus shifted from orbital activities to lunar surface activities, the required skill-set and subsequently the training methods, changed. The requirements duly changed again when NASA left the moon for the last time in 1972 and have continued to evolve through the SkyLab, Space Shuttle, and ISS eras. Yet because the visits to the moon were so long ago, NASA's expertise in the realm of extra-terrestrial EVAs has diminished. As manned spaceflight again shifts its focus beyond low earth orbit, EVA success will depend on the ability to synergize the knowledge gained over 40+ years of spacewalking to create a training method that allows a single crewmember to perform equally well, whether performing an EVA on the surface of the Moon, while in the vacuum of space, or heading for a rendezvous with Mars. This paper reviews NASA's past and present EVA training methods and extrapolates techniques from both to construct the basis for future EVA astronaut training.
机译:尼尔·阿姆斯特朗(Neil Armstrong)轻描淡写的话是:“对人类来说,这是一小步,对人类而言,是一大飞跃。”是40年前从宁静基地讲出来的。即使在今天,这些话语仍在数以百万计的人群中引起共鸣,其中包括许多人类首次降落在月球表面时尚未出生的人。从本质上讲,本着探索的精神,舱外活动(EVA)在载人航天的整个历史中都引起了极大的兴奋。从1965年6月埃德·怀特(Ed White)的第一次太空行走,到1969年登月的第一步,再到国际空间站(ISS)的预期竣工,在太空真空中生存,生活和工作的能力一直保持着一个可能的信标。这是NASA的第一次太空行走,在地面上教给工程师们宝贵的教训,即成功的太空行走需要一套独特的学习技能。该课程引发了广泛的努力,以开发和定义确保成功所必需的培训要求。随着焦点从轨道活动转移到月球表面活动,所需的技能和随后的训练方法发生了变化。 1972年,当美国宇航局最后一次离开月球时,需求又发生了适当的变化,并且在SkyLab,航天飞机和ISS时代不断发展。但是,由于对月球的访问时间很久,NASA在地面EVA领域的专业知识已经减少。随着载人航天再次将重点转移到低地球轨道之外,EVA的成功将取决于能否协同40多年太空行走中获得的知识,从而创造出一种训练方法,使单个机组人员能够同样出色地执行任务,无论是否在EVA上执行EVA处于月球表面,而处于太空真空中,或前往与火星会合。本文回顾了NASA过去和现在的EVA训练方法,并从这两种方法中推断出技术,以为将来的EVA宇航员训练奠定基础。

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