The Partial Gravity of the Moon and Mars Appears Insufficient to Maintain Human Health
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Astronauts who spend many weeks or months in space in microgravity suffer serious health problems including muscle atrophy, cardiovascular deconditioning, bone calcium loss, impaired vision, and immune system changes. The debilitating effects of weightlessness were first demonstrated on the early Skylab, Salyut, and Mir missions, but it was then hoped that countermeasures including in-flight exercise and resistance training could reduce most of these problems. Similar effects are anticipated in the partial gravity of the Moon and Mars. Direct evidence of the long-term effects of partial gravity on humans is not yet available, but indirect evidence suggests that partial gravity exposure below 0.4 g will be insufficient to maintain musculoskeletal and cardiopulmonary conditioning over the long term. Some studies show a strong correlation between heart rate, oxygen consumption, net metabolic rate, and simulated gravity from 0 to 1 g. Exposure to moon and Mars gravities will probably cause less severe physiological deconditioning than microgravity, but the benefit of partial gravity seems likely to be roughly proportional to the level of gravity experienced. As in microgravity, exercise countermeasures seem useful but insufficient to preserve all physiological systems as they would be in Earth gravity.
Description
ICES500: Life Science/Life Support Research Technologies
The 50th International Conference on Environmental Systems was held virtually on 12 July 2021 through 14 July 2021.