Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study

Past spaceflight missions have shown that astronauts adapt their motor-control strategies to the microgravity environment. Even though astronauts undergo hundreds of training hours, the strategies for locomotion and orientation are not specifically prescribed. The majority of an astronaut’s motion-c...

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Main Author: Stirling, Leia Abigail
Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: Aerospace Computational Design Laboratory, Dept. of Aeronautics & Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/57608
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author Stirling, Leia Abigail
author_facet Stirling, Leia Abigail
author_sort Stirling, Leia Abigail
collection MIT
description Past spaceflight missions have shown that astronauts adapt their motor-control strategies to the microgravity environment. Even though astronauts undergo hundreds of training hours, the strategies for locomotion and orientation are not specifically prescribed. The majority of an astronaut’s motion-control strategies are developed underwater. While underwater training can be beneficial in certain aspects, such as learning which orientations an astronaut will encounter and becoming familiar with task timelines, it is not effective for self-learned motor-control strategies. Further, the development of unfamiliar tasks, such as reorienting without external forces, will most likely not occur naturally. Self-rotations—human-body rotations without external torques—are not only helpful for reducing adaptation time, but can be a crucial safety countermeasure during extravehicular activity. In this thesis, computational and experimental methods are developed to create and analyze astronaut reorientation methods. The computational development of control methods for human motion planning offers a novel way to provide astronauts with maneuvers that are difficult to obtain experimentally in Earth gravity (1-G). Control of human-body dynamics can be posed as a motion-planning problem for which many different solution methods exist. This research considers two different frameworks—quantized control and optimal control. The quantized control method permits the development of complete maneuvers that are appropriate for humans to perform in high-stress situations by defining a set of specific finite-time trajectories called motion primitives. The implementation of an optimal control method allows for the refinement and further understanding of maneuver characteristics with an emphasis on how the central nervous system controls motion. Human rotation experiments provide further insight into the complexity of self-rotation techniques and a way to study the effects of training in a rigorous and realistic manner.
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spelling mit-1721.1/576082019-04-13T00:05:32Z Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study Stirling, Leia Abigail Past spaceflight missions have shown that astronauts adapt their motor-control strategies to the microgravity environment. Even though astronauts undergo hundreds of training hours, the strategies for locomotion and orientation are not specifically prescribed. The majority of an astronaut’s motion-control strategies are developed underwater. While underwater training can be beneficial in certain aspects, such as learning which orientations an astronaut will encounter and becoming familiar with task timelines, it is not effective for self-learned motor-control strategies. Further, the development of unfamiliar tasks, such as reorienting without external forces, will most likely not occur naturally. Self-rotations—human-body rotations without external torques—are not only helpful for reducing adaptation time, but can be a crucial safety countermeasure during extravehicular activity. In this thesis, computational and experimental methods are developed to create and analyze astronaut reorientation methods. The computational development of control methods for human motion planning offers a novel way to provide astronauts with maneuvers that are difficult to obtain experimentally in Earth gravity (1-G). Control of human-body dynamics can be posed as a motion-planning problem for which many different solution methods exist. This research considers two different frameworks—quantized control and optimal control. The quantized control method permits the development of complete maneuvers that are appropriate for humans to perform in high-stress situations by defining a set of specific finite-time trajectories called motion primitives. The implementation of an optimal control method allows for the refinement and further understanding of maneuver characteristics with an emphasis on how the central nervous system controls motion. Human rotation experiments provide further insight into the complexity of self-rotation techniques and a way to study the effects of training in a rigorous and realistic manner. 2010-08-27T20:07:54Z 2010-08-27T20:07:54Z 2008-06 Technical Report http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/57608 en_US ACDL Technical Reports;ACDL TR-08-5 application/pdf Aerospace Computational Design Laboratory, Dept. of Aeronautics & Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Stirling, Leia Abigail
Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study
title Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study
title_full Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study
title_fullStr Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study
title_full_unstemmed Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study
title_short Development of Astronaut Reorientation Methods: A Computational and Experimental Study
title_sort development of astronaut reorientation methods a computational and experimental study
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/57608
work_keys_str_mv AT stirlingleiaabigail developmentofastronautreorientationmethodsacomputationalandexperimentalstudy