1. End-to-end mission design for microbial ISRU activities as preparation for a moon village
- Author
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J. Schlechten, Aidan Cowley, S.Y. Tjon, A. Canals Pou, Lynn J. Rothschild, L. Teeney, Jessica Snyder, Francesco Spina, Daniele Giuseppe Mazzotta, Benjamin A. E. Lehner, Anne S. Meyer, Stan J. J. Brouns, and A. Filosa
- Subjects
ISRU ,business.product_category ,Process (engineering) ,Lunar Landing Site ,Bioreactor ,Aerospace Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Moon South Pole ,Microbiology ,01 natural sciences ,Elemental iron ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Mission design ,End-to-end principle ,0103 physical sciences ,Aerospace engineering ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,020301 aerospace & aeronautics ,Mission architecture ,business.industry ,In situ resource utilization ,Mars Exploration Program ,Regolith ,Rocket ,Environmental science ,business - Abstract
In situ resource utilization (ISRU) increasingly features as an element of human long-term exploration and settlement missions to the lunar surface. In this study, all requirements to test a novel, biological approach for ISRU are validated, and an end-to-end mission architecture is proposed. The general mission consists of a lander with a fully autonomous bioreactor able to process lunar regolith and extract elemental iron. The elemental iron could either be stored or directly utilized to generate iron wires or construction material. To maximize the success rate of this mission, potential landing sites for future missions are studied, and technical details (thermal radiation, shielding, power-supply) are analyzed. The final section will assess the potential mission architecture (orbit, rocket, lander, timeframe). This design might not only be one step further towards an international “Moon Village”, but may also enable similar missions to ultimately colonize Mars and further explore our solar system.
- Published
- 2019
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