产品展示
  • 米奇情侣可爱划痕贴侧门遮挡保险杠卡通米老鼠贴 汽车贴纸 装饰贴
  • 大众途观扶手箱改装配件2017款2016年/15/14/13/12/10中央手扶箱
  • 适用于本田xrv原后备箱隔物板缤智遮物帘尾箱中隔板改装内饰配件
  • 途乐Y62副驾驶防踢垫涂乐储物箱防护保护垫内饰装饰改装专用配件
  • 适配解放J6P汽车配件j6驾驶室电动油泵电机举升泵底座油封修理包
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

汽车配件

NASA astronauts show new way to take out space trash

2024-05-18 20:53:12      点击:114

Four astronauts on the International Space Station can create over 2.5 tons of trash per year, but how to get rid of that garbage has been an ongoing struggle.

At the low-Earth orbiting laboratory, astronauts tested a new technology last week that could become a go-to solution for space waste disposal in the future. For the first time, the seven-member crew successfully used a Nanoracks Bishop airlock system to dump about 172 pounds of junk out of the station.

The technology leverages a specially designed container and removes the trash in a bag by sending it out to burn up in Earth's atmosphere. The method doesn't contribute to the growing space debris problem, NASA officials said.

SEE ALSO:A rocket will crash into the moon. It'll leave way more than a scar.

The status quo for collecting the astronauts' trash right now involves hoarding waste for months onboard until a commercial spacecraft can haul it away. The astronauts fill a designated cargo spacecraft with trash. Then, that entire spacecraft lands back on Earth or burns up on re-entry, according to NASA.

The demo shows the new system is "a good way to clean up our home in low-Earth orbit," said Kathy Lueders, NASA's associate administrator for space operations in a recent tweet.

Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!

The ISS crew could, in theory, fill the Nanoracks' container with up to 600 pounds of trash, according to the company. Once the waste bag is released, the airlock re-mounts empty.

Trash takes up precious space in tight quarters and presents safety issues for astronauts. After all, some of that waste is biological.


Related Stories
  • Stunning photo captures space station crossing the moon in jaw-dropping detail
  • NASA didn't invent Velcro. But it did dream up these surprising things.
  • Watch NASA's record-breaking astronaut return home on a Russian spacecraft
  • Private astronaut brings an item of mythic proportions to space station
  • Astronaut Barbie finally — literally — goes to outer space

The U.S. space agency has been looking for alternate solutions to manage trash, especially because the spacecraft disposal method won't be an option for long, distant missions to the moon and, eventually, Mars.

“Waste collection in space has been a long standing, yet not as publicly discussed, challenge aboard the ISS,” said Cooper Read, Bishop Airlock program manager at Nanoracks, in a company news release. “As we move into a time with more people living and working in space, this is a critical function just like it is for everyone at home.”

The load dumped during the demo included foam, packing materials, cargo transfer bags, dirty astronaut clothes, hygiene products and office supply waste, according to Nanoracks.

NK propaganda outlets slam Seoul's unification minister as 'madman'
Terribly named 'murder hornet' finally gets a new name