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Post-Landing Orion Crew Survival in Warm Ocean Areas: A Case Study in Iterative Environmental Design

Journal Article
2008-01-2080
ISSN: 1946-3855, e-ISSN: 1946-3901
Published June 29, 2008 by SAE International in United States
Post-Landing Orion Crew Survival in Warm Ocean Areas: A Case Study in Iterative Environmental Design
Sector:
Citation: Rains, G., Pantermuehl, J., and Bue, G., "Post-Landing Orion Crew Survival in Warm Ocean Areas: A Case Study in Iterative Environmental Design," SAE Int. J. Aerosp. 1(1):291-299, 2009, https://doi.org/10.4271/2008-01-2080.
Language: English

Abstract:

The Orion crew module (CM) is being designed to perform survivable land and water landings. There are many issues associated with post-landing crew survival. In general, the most challenging of the realistic Orion landing scenarios from an environmental control standpoint is the off-nominal water landing. Available power and other consumables will be very limited after landing, and it may not be possible to provide full environmental control within the crew cabin for very long after splashdown. Given the bulk and thermal insulation characteristics of the crew-worn pressure suits, landing in a warm tropical ocean area would pose a risk to crew survival from elevated core body temperatures, if for some reason the crewmembers were not able to remove their suits and/or exit the vehicle. This paper summarizes the analyses performed and conclusions reached regarding post-landing crew survival following a water landing, from the standpoint of the crew's core body temperatures.