Metadatos de indexación

Space travel in a high altitude environment: Biology by-passing the pressure laws of physics and BioSpaceFormin g


 
Dublin Core Elementos de metadatos PKP Metadatos para el documento
 
1. Título Título del documento Space travel in a high altitude environment: Biology by-passing the pressure laws of physics and BioSpaceFormin g
 
2. Creador/a Nombre de autor/a, institución, país Gustavo Rafael Zubieta-Calleja; Instituto Pulmonar y Patología en la Altura (IPPA); Bolivia, Estado Plurinacional de
 
2. Creador/a Nombre de autor/a, institución, país Natalia Zubieta-DeUrioste
 
3. Materia Disciplina(s)
 
3. Materia Palabra/s clave space travel; chronic hypoxia; EVA; spacesuits; high altitude; adaptation.
 
4. Descripción Resumen After the accident on Apolo1, with 100% oxygen in the cabin, all spaceships now travel with a sea level pressure and 20.9% oxygen. Extravehicular activity requires lowering the pressures. It is complex and time consuming. Permanently reducing the cabin pressure would be a great advantage. A paper by NASA in 2013, proposed for the spaceflight environment: 8 psia / 32% O2 (reducing the sea level pressure (14.7 psi / 20.9% O 2), but increasing the fraction of oxygen in order to replicate the sea level PaO2). However, we question this proposal, as it is based on the fear of hypoxia. Our proposal back in 2007 suggested that space travel should take place in a hypobaric environment of 9.5 psi / 20.9% O2 (like in the city of La Paz-Bolivia (3,600m) [11,811ft]). The logic behind it is that at all altitudes on planet Earth, life thrives in a 20.9% Oxygen, 79% Nitrogen. PaCO2 also needs to be considered. In a physiological manner, over 200 million inhabitants of high altitude above 2,000m [6,561ft], have perfectly normal lives. The astronauts could benefit of a Extra-Vehicular Activity (EVA) suit pressure of only 149 mmHg [2.8psi] (lighter, much more comfortable and efficient spacesuits) and space travel anemia could be reduced. The preparation prior-to-space travel could be carried out by adapting and living in a high altitude environment. We consider chronic hypoxia a fundamental step in BioSpaceForming (Adaptation to life in space). As all living beings start to move out of Earth into space, they will have to change their biology and adapt to new conditions.
 
5. Editorial Institución organizadora, ubicación Editorial Ciencias Médicas
 
6. Colaborador/a Patrocinador(es)
 
7. Fecha (DD-MM-AAAA) 2019-09-18
 
8. Tipo Estado y género Artículo revisado por pares
 
8. Tipo Tipo
 
9. Formato Formato de archivo HTML, PDF
 
10. Identificador Identificador uniforme de recursos http://www.revibiomedica.sld.cu/index.php/ibi/article/view/292
 
11. Fuente Título; vol., núm. (año) Revista Cubana de Investigaciones Biomédicas; Vol. 38, No. 3 (2019): Julio - Septiembre
 
12. Idioma Español=es en
 
13. Relación Archivos complementarios
 
14. Cobertura Localización geoespacial, periodo cronológico, muestra de investigación (sexo, edad, etc.)
 
15. Derechos Derechos de autor/a y permisos Copyright (c) 2019 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0
Licencia de Creative Commons
Este obra está bajo una licencia de Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial 4.0 Internacional.