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Clothes Astronauts Would Need in Decades-Long Space Missions

by Kathy Jones on Jun 4 2013 10:05 PM

 Clothes Astronauts Would Need in Decades-Long Space Missions
We should start thinking about what kinds of clothes astronauts will need for decades-long space missions, a University of Rhode Island professor has said.
Questions that keep Karl Aspelund, an assistant professor of design at URI up at night: How will astronauts do laundry in space? How can we recycle old clothes in space? Is there a way to make clothes in space?

Those questions might be answered soon. Aspelund just won a 15,000 dollars grant from URI's Council for Research to begin background research for the project, with the hope of eventually creating guidelines and prototypes.

Aspelund got interested in space apparel last year when he was sitting in his car in the driveway of his Warwick house listening to a National Public Radio report about the 100 Year Starship Initiative, a program aimed at inspiring travel beyond our solar system by 2112.

Later Aspelund sent an e-mail to NPR asking whether anyone had looked into apparel needs for a mission of this length.

An invitation followed from Mae Jemison, a former astronaut and leader of the Starship project, to attend a conference in Houston, where Aspelund intrigued engineers, astrophysicists and space-travel enthusiasts with his ideas.

The URI grant, awarded last month, allows him to rocket to the next level.

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Working with three graduate students, he'll collect information about space clothing worn by Russian and American astronauts and explore creating outfits with 3d printing, among other things.

He also plans to research the ecological implications of the need to recycle space clothes, and he'll interview former astronauts from the International Space Station, scientists on Antarctic bases and submariners about wearing clothes in isolated and sometimes harsh conditions.

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If all goes as planned, he hopes to have prototypes for a space simulation in 2014 and, in coming years, for the International Space Station, where someone would actually wear the clothing for weeks or months to test hygiene, durability and recycling possibilities.

Currently, astronauts at the International Space Station wear polo shirts and cargo pants, with lots of pockets. Dirty clothes and trash are put into a "supply craft'' that burns up on re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere.

Source-ANI


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