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Microbial Food Safety in Space Production Systems
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2021.
-
Abstract
- While traveling to deep space is difficult for many reasons, food is a crucial one. Round-trip Mars mission scenarios last 3 years, demanding food with a shelf-life of 5 years; this means that feeding human crew sustainably for long-duration missions beyond low Earth orbit (LEO) will ultimately lead to a paradigm shift away from the current Earth-based food production system, which depends upon storing and transporting prepackaged foods, and toward bio-regenerative production of food in space. Pharmaceuticals and nutritional supplements face similar challenges. Moreover, the methods we currently use to detect dangerous microbes in food require sample return to Earth, a situation not viable for deep-space missions. While the science behind generating foods and bioproducts is covered by other white papers, in this paper we discuss a crucial gap uniting all of them: how to ensure that such products are free of unwanted microbial contamination and safe for crew to consume. Because Earth-based food safety systems cannot be directly applied in space, safety assurance is currently a critical bottleneck in the space production of food and other bioproducts. Future sustainable deep-space missions will require NASA to devote more resources in the coming decade to understanding the biological and physical science principles underlying microbial food safety in space, and to developing efficient, reliable methods in this area.
- Subjects :
- Life Sciences (General)
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Notes :
- 719125.02.01.02.02.02, , 80NM0018D0004P00002, , 80MSFC18C0011
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.20210023206
- Document Type :
- Report