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posted by on Thursday February 16 2017, @12:24PM   Printer-friendly
from the another-in-our-ongoing-instructional-series dept.

NASA has a problem with #1 and #2 in space. What to do? Crowdsource it, in the form of a contest where anyone can submit a superior method. The contest just ended with NASA awarding $30,000 to the winning entries.

NASA astronauts' current method of waste disposal involves using a diaper during spacewalks and launch and entry, but these systems can be used only for about a day. The agency noted that it is difficult to design pooping systems for microgravity, where fluids and other things float. Maintaining good hygiene for these systems was among the primary challenges participants were tasked with solving.

In a description of the challenge, NASA said it was looking for technologies that have a "technical readiness level of 4" on its "ready for flight" scale, meaning that the solution could be tested in one year and be ready for space in three years. NASA added that it would consider solutions that would need more time if they were considered breakthroughs.

The goal is to use the system on a mission in the next three or four years, the challenge page said.

An earlier article about the problem: http://www.space.com/35576-space-poop-system-orion-deep-space.html.


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  • (Score: 2) by Unixnut on Thursday February 16 2017, @02:56PM

    by Unixnut (5779) on Thursday February 16 2017, @02:56PM (#467802)

    > I generally don't poop when I am out for a walk.

    Me neither, but NASA highlighted spacewalks as an issue, so presumably if the spacewalks are long, you need to be able to poop in your suit. A quick search took me to this page: http://www.answers.com/Q/Which_astronaut_have_longest_space_walk [answers.com]

    Where apparently the longest spacewalk is 8hrs and 56min. I can feasibly believe an astronaut may need the loo during those almost 9 hours in the suit. Quite a few spacewalks are multi-hour long themselves.

    > Why would the seals need to be air tight? I was thinking it would be inside the main hull of the space craft, like a giant washing machine cylinder.

    Because then you would have splatter everywhere, and floating turds in space isn't my idea of fun really. Unlike in a gravity environment, things don't drop where they are deposited, but rather float around and find their way out of small holes and cause issues.

    While inside the cylinder may be spinning within the hull, the hull itself isn't, so between the hull and spinning cylinder you would have floating turds and piss. If not sealed that will get out and float around the rest of the station, which sounds like a recipe for problems, not to mention the smell.

    Plus I don't want to be the one who has to go clean the hull where the cylinder is. Easier if the system disposes of the excrement into bags, which can be jettisoned when convenient.

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  • (Score: 2) by shipofgold on Thursday February 16 2017, @09:18PM

    by shipofgold (4696) on Thursday February 16 2017, @09:18PM (#467967)

    If I read TFA correctly the issue really is what happens when there is a catastrophic failure in the spacestation and the astronauts need to put on spacesuits for an extended period of time. Those diapers are going to get pretty ripe after 4-5 days.