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Analysis of Designs of Space Laboratories Print E-mail
Jun 30 2003
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A report presents a review of the development of laboratories in outer space, starting from the pioneering Skylab and Salyut stations of the United States and the former Soviet Union and progressing through current and anticipated future developments. The report includes textual discussions of space-station designs, illustrated with drawings, photographs, and tables. The approach taken in the review was not to provide a comprehensive catalog of each space laboratory and every design topic that applies to it, but, rather, to illustrate architectural precedents by providing examples that illustrate major design problems and principles to be applied in solving them. Hence, the report deemphasizes information from the most recent space-station literature and concentrates on information from original design reports that show how designs originated and evolved. The most important contribution of the review was the development of a methodology, called "units of analysis," for identifying and analyzing design issues from the perspectives of four broad domains: laboratory science, crew, modes of operations, and the system as a whole.

This work was done by Marc M. Cohen of Ames Research Center. For further information, access the Technical Support Package (TSP) free on-line at www.techbriefs.com under the Machinery/Automation category. ARC-14965.

This Brief includes a Technical Support Package (TSP).

Analysis of Designs of Space Laboratories (reference ARC-14965) is currently available for download from the TSP library.

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