Dynamics of Extra-Vehicular Activities in Low-Gravity Surface Environments
David A. Spencer and Matthew A. Gast
International Journal of Aeronautical and Space Sicences, vol. 14, no. 1, pp.11-18, 2013
Abstract : Human spaceflight experience in extra-vehicular activity (EVA) is limited to two regimes: the micro-gravity environment of
Earth orbit, and the lunar surface environment at one-sixth of Earth¡¯s gravity. Future human missions to low-gravity bodies,
including asteroids, comets, and the moons of Mars, will require EVA techniques that are beyond the current experience base.
In order to develop robust approaches for exploring these small bodies, the dynamics associated with human exploration on
low-gravity surface must be characterized. This paper examines the translational and rotational motion of an astronaut on the
surface of a small body, and it is shown that the low-gravity environment will pose challenges to the surface mobility of an
astronaut, unless new tools and EVA techniques are developed. Possibilities for addressing these challenges are explored, and
utilization of the International Space Station to test operational concepts and hardware in preparation for a low-gravity surface
EVA is discussed.
Keyword : extra-vehicular activities, spacewalk, small-body exploration, micro-gravity |