美国国家航空航天局海洋项目(NASA OCEAN)--海洋-空间模拟项目

D Chamberland
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摘要

有朝一日,在长期的深空探索、火星延伸任务或在月球上建立长期基地的过程中,可能需要一种具有生物再生功能的先进生命支持系统(ALS)。 自 1988 年以来,美国国家航空航天局(NASA)一直在对这种 ALS 系统进行深入研究。 值得注意的是,约翰-肯尼迪航天中心(KSC)、艾姆斯研究中心(ARC)和林登-约翰逊航天中心(JSC)都启动了相关项目。 肯尼迪航天中心的 ALS 工作被命名为 "面包板项目",因为它采用了开发组件并将其组合成面包板的方法,以了解生物再生 ALS 图景[也称为受控生态生命支持系统 (CELSS)]的更小块,类似于电子 "面包板"。 7 年来,"面包板 "项目一直致力于研究在 113 立方米的密室中生长的高等作物--这是世界上运行时间最长、规模最大的封闭式受控生长密室。 事实证明,该生长室非常成功地实现了多种农作物从幼苗到收获的生长,并帮助研究人员了解这些可食用植物在封闭、环境受控的环境中复杂的生物循环。 由于该系统的最终用途将是一个更具挑战性的环境,因此将该系统的一个特殊设计部件移入极端条件下是一项重要的测试。 KSC 的工程师们开发了一个紧凑、便携的功能植物模块,用于在佛罗里达州基拉戈的世界上唯一一个固定海底实验室进行测试。 该实验室被称为 MarineLab,由海洋资源开发基金会在一个约 10 米深的泻湖中的设施运行。 该项目被称为 OCEAN 项目(Ocean CELSS Experimental Analog NASA)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The NASA OCEAN project--an ocean-space analog

An advanced life support system (ALS) with bioregenerative components may one day be required for long-term, deep space exploration, in extended missions to Mars or in establishing long-term bases on the moon. Intensive research programs on such ALS systems have been ongoing throughout the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) since 1988. Notably, projects have been initiated at the John F. Kennedy Space Center (KSC), Ames Research Center (ARC), and the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center (JSC). The KSC ALS work has been named the "Breadboard Project" because of its approach developing the components and combining them into a breadboard to understanding the bioregenerative ALS picture [also called a Controlled Ecological Life Support System (CELSS)] in smaller pieces, similar to an electronic "breadboard." The Breadboard Project has been involved for 7 years in the study of higher crops grown in a 113 m3 chamber--the longest operating and largest such closed, controlled growth chamber in the world. This chamber has proven itself to be very successful in growing a wide variety of crops from seedlings to harvest and in helping researchers understand the complex biological cycle of such edible plants in closed, environmentally controlled environments. Because the system's ultimate use will be a more challenging environment, moving a specially designed piece of the system into extreme conditions was an important test. Engineers at KSC developed a compact, portable, functional plant module for testing in the world's only fixed seafloor laboratory at Key Largo, FL. The laboratory, called MarineLab, is operated out of the facilities of the Marine Resources Development Foundation in a lagoon of some 10 m depth. The project was called the OCEAN project (Ocean CELSS Experimental Analog NASA).

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