Win $30,000 by designing a way for astronauts to poop in their spacesuits
Space travel poses a lot of problems for
us humans. In addition to the extreme temperatures, vacuum, lack of gravity,
radiation, etc. there are also our biological functions that need to be taken
care of. Specifically: what’s the best way to go to the bathroom in a
spacesuit?
Toilets on
spacecraft use fan-driven suction systems to store solid waste until such time
that it can be disposed of. But NASA wants a method that can be used in
astronauts’ spacesuits.
In an emergency,
the suits can provide clean air, shelter, water, and enough nutrients to keep a
crew member alive for up to six days, but there still isn’t a way to adequately
deal with bodily waste. Right now, the backup solution for suited astronauts
who need to answer the call of nature is diapers, which get uncomfortable
pretty fast once they're filled with feces, and can lead to infection when worn
for longer than a day.
To solve the poo
problem, NASA has turned to crowdfunding platform HeroX to source a system that
can collect 75 grams of fecal matter and 1 liter of urine per day, for six
days. Anyone who comes up with a hands-free solution that can operate in
microgravity and prevent leaking oxygen could win bounties up to $30,000.
“As humans push
beyond low-earth orbit to travel to the moon and Mars, we will have many
problems to solve—most of them very complex, technical problems," said
NASA astronaut Rick Mastracchio in a video. "But some are as simple as
'How do we go to the bathroom in space?'"
Think you could
come up with an answer? Check out the full criteria for
the system and make sure you enter before 11:59 p.m. ET on Dec. 20. Who knows,
astronauts could one day be crapping into a system you designed.
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