Effects and Solutions on the Human Body After Long-Duration Space Flights

Jose Jaime Esquivel Patricio
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Abstract

During the Cold War, President John F. Kennedy made it a mission for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to accomplish a lunar landing and return to Earth. The final lunar landing and the last time humans left Low Earth Orbit (LEO) was in December, 1972. However, 47 years have passed and the fascination with traveling into deep space remains alive and flourishing. A major problem with future human missions to Mars is the effects of microgravity and Mars’ 0.38g environment. Unfortunately, space medicine is limited and little is known about the effects of microgravity on the human body after one year in space. Is it possible for astronauts to survive long spaceflight missions to Mars? To help address this question, my research focuses on the effects of microgravity on astronauts in order to find solutions for long-duration space flights to Mars. Bone and muscle loss are factors that could lead to severe, unknown consequences on an astronaut’s health. My methods included doing an analytical interpretation of historical and contemporary research on long-distance spaceflight. In the future, longer missions are going to require more permanent solutions for humans to be an interplanetary species. The current solutions being used in the International Space Station (ISS) are only to treat individual symptoms separately. Only theoretical permanent solutions were found, such as artificial gravity; therefore, further research is needed. Centripetal acceleration has shown great promise to eliminate microgravity effects but more research is needed to understand the health consequences and the limitations of rotation that humans can sustain.
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长时间太空飞行对人体的影响及解决办法
冷战期间,约翰·f·肯尼迪总统让美国国家航空航天局(NASA)完成登月并返回地球的任务。人类最后一次登月也是最后一次离开近地轨道是在1972年12月。然而,47年过去了,人们对深空旅行的热情依然旺盛。未来人类火星任务的一个主要问题是微重力和火星0.38克环境的影响。不幸的是,太空医学是有限的,人们对微重力在太空中一年后对人体的影响知之甚少。宇航员有可能在前往火星的长期太空飞行任务中幸存下来吗?为了解决这个问题,我的研究重点是微重力对宇航员的影响,以便找到长期飞往火星的太空飞行的解决方案。骨骼和肌肉的流失可能会对宇航员的健康造成严重的、未知的后果。我的方法包括对远距离太空飞行的历史和当代研究进行分析解释。在未来,更长时间的任务将需要更永久的解决方案,以使人类成为星际物种。目前在国际空间站(ISS)使用的解决方案只是单独治疗个别症状。只找到了理论上的永久解决方案,比如人造重力;因此,需要进一步的研究。向心加速在消除微重力影响方面大有希望,但需要进行更多的研究,以了解对健康的影响以及人类能够承受的旋转的局限性。
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