NASA utilization of the International Space Station and the Vision for Space Exploration

In response to the US President's Vision for Space Exploration (January 14, 2004), NASA has revised its utilization plans for International Space Station (ISS) to focus on (1) research on astronaut health and the development of countermeasures that will protect our crews from the space environm...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Acta astronautica Vol. 61; no. 1; pp. 176 - 184
Main Authors: Robinson, Julie A., Thumm, Tracy L., Thomas, Donald A.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-06-2007
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Summary:In response to the US President's Vision for Space Exploration (January 14, 2004), NASA has revised its utilization plans for International Space Station (ISS) to focus on (1) research on astronaut health and the development of countermeasures that will protect our crews from the space environment during long-duration voyages, (2) ISS as a test bed for research and technology developments that will insure vehicle systems and operational practices are ready for future exploration missions, (3) developing and validating operational practices and procedures for long-duration space missions. In addition, NASA will continue a small amount of fundamental research in life and microgravity sciences. There have been significant research accomplishments that are important for achieving the Exploration Vision. Some of these have been formal research payloads, while others have come from research based on the operation of ISS. We will review a selection of these experiments and results, as well as outline some of ongoing and upcoming research. The ISS represents the only microgravity opportunity to perform on-orbit long-duration studies of human health and performance and technologies relevant for future long-duration missions planned during the next 25 years. Even as NASA focuses on developing the Orion spacecraft and return to the moon (2015–2020), research on and operation of the ISS is fundamental to the success of NASA's Exploration Vision.
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ISSN:0094-5765
1879-2030
DOI:10.1016/j.actaastro.2007.01.019