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Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s (1995)

Chapter: Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1

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Suggested Citation:"Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1." National Research Council. 1995. Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12284.
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Suggested Citation:"Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1." National Research Council. 1995. Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12284.
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Page 33
Suggested Citation:"Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1." National Research Council. 1995. Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12284.
×
Page 34
Suggested Citation:"Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1." National Research Council. 1995. Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12284.
×
Page 35
Suggested Citation:"Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1." National Research Council. 1995. Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/12284.
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Page 36

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Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1 Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s PART I—OVERVIEW 1 Introduction Microgravity research is concerned with the identification and description of the effects of reduced gravitational forces on physical, chemical, and biological phenomena. Microgravity research probes a new parameter space where gravitational acceleration no longer is equal to 1 g and, instead, can approach values that are orders of magnitude lower. Gravity affects a wide variety of scientific areas, some of which have profound implications for space exploration. Scientific disciplines that are affected include fundamental physics, fluid mechanics and transport phenomena, materials science, biological sciences, and combustion. These disciplines are investigated predominantly as laboratory science, which requires the use of controlled, model experiments. Laboratory REPORT MENU experiments often require the constant attention and interaction of the NOTICE experimenter, and their results are validated by their reproducibility. It is its MEMBERSHIP laboratory science character that distinguishes microgravity research from most PREFACE of the other areas of science commonly recognized as space studies. In this EXECUTIVE SUMMARY report, these fundamental characteristics of microgravity research are illustrated PART I CHAPTER 1 in many different ways. CHAPTER 2 PART II As is usually the case in the physical and biological sciences, discoveries CHAPTER 3 are made when a new area or novel parameter space is explored. Microgravity CHAPTER 4 research, despite its relative infancy, is no exception. Increasingly, fundamental CHAPTER 5 processes that were thought to be well understood under terrestrial (1-g) CHAPTER 6 conditions have, in fact, proved to behave in altered and even startlingly CHAPTER 7 unfamiliar ways when observed and measured in reduced-gravity environments. PART III CHAPTER 8 Space experiments in areas such as combustion, fluid flow and transport, phase APPENDIX A separation, fundamental physics, and biology have revealed new phenomena APPENDIX B and have demonstrated new and occasionally unpredicted behavior. Indeed, many commonly experienced phenomena can be dramatically altered in a low- gravity setting: for example, the dynamic behavior of gas bubbles in fluids, the sedimentation of particles, the characteristics of the flame of a burning candle, and the behavior of fluids within and outside their containers. This modified file:///C|/SSB_old_web/mgoppch1.htm (1 of 6) [6/18/2004 11:15:42 AM]

Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1 behavior will profoundly affect the technology for handling liquids and gases in reduced-gravity environments. Nevertheless, virtually all scientific experimental research in these areas has taken place in the terrestrial setting of 1 g. Microgravity science is neither a homogeneous nor a distinct discipline. It has evolved gradually over the past two decades into a range of multidisciplinary space research activities in which the unifying features are basic and applied studies of gravitational interactions with fluids and a variety of condensed states, and with transport phenomena in physical, chemical, and biological systems. In fact, the fluid mechanics and transport sciences constitute the core science content of microgravity studies. Therefore, in considering new and important directions for microgravity research, considerable emphasis is given in this report to the study of transport phenomena. These phenomena are strongly gravity dependent; they have extensive applications to space systems engineering; and they play a pivotal role in many important modern technologies. THE MICROGRAVITY ENVIRONMENT The availability of orbiting laboratories, both crewed and uncrewed, has provided access to an environment in which processes can be studied under sustained levels of reduced gravity. The term microgravity is itself something of a misnomer. Because the gravitational force is infinite in extent, low-gravity conditions can be achieved only at substantial distances from any massive object. In the current context, however, microgravity describes the acceleration conditions attending free-fall, that is, the acceleration sensed within an inertial reference frame that is at rest with respect to the local environment but accelerating toward the center of the Earth. Such conditions occur for limited periods in drop towers and in aircraft executing parabolic orbits. Spacecraft and satellites in near-Earth orbit also operate at reduced gravity levels (down to 10-6 g) and have the additional advantage of providing much longer times for exploiting this environment. The principal characteristic of low-gravity environments is that the net gravitational body forces are reduced substantially. This leads to decreases in hydrostatic pressure, buoyancy-driven flows, and rates of sedimentation. Reduction of the gravitational force, or weight, permits other forces, such as that due to surface tension, to become important, if not dominant. An immediate consequence is that under microgravity conditions, multicomponent and multiphase fluid and other fluid-solid system behaviors (e.g., mixing, separation, and interfacial phenomena) are significantly altered. Many other fluid transport phenomena involving heat and mass transfer are also influenced by the reduction of gravity. There is increasing recognition that transport phenomena are of central importance in a wide range of physical, chemical, and biological systems that play major roles in many terrestrial and space-based technologies. Specifically, if NASA's long-range program in space science, exploration, and transportation is ever to be realized, it is essential to obtain a comprehensive understanding of low- gravity fluid phenomena and their consequences for extraterrestrial processing. file:///C|/SSB_old_web/mgoppch1.htm (2 of 6) [6/18/2004 11:15:42 AM]

Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1 PERCEPTIONS AND REALITIES OF MICROGRAVITY RESEARCH The history of microgravity research is not extensive-the field is barely a few decades old. Furthermore, only a limited number of microgravity experiments and samples have been studied to date, and the accumulated microgravity laboratory experience known to the U.S. scientific community amounts to less than 1000 hours of in-orbit time. Several recent NASA shuttle missions have been dedicated to laboratory science in microgravity (USMP-2 and IML-2) and are expected to yield extensive data and sample returns. Some information about the scientific results from spaceflight is provided in Chapters 3 through 7. At present, however, all of the data have not been fully analyzed and reported. Nevertheless, there have been some notable successes. For example, the Lambda Point Experiment (LPE) was flown on the shuttle in October 1992 (USMP-1). Analysis of the data indicates that an improvement of nearly two orders of magnitude over previous data obtained on Earth has been achieved. This was done in an unbiased way, and heat capacity data approaching within a few nanokelvins of the Lambda point were obtained. This experiment gives a clear demonstration that highly sophisticated experiments involving the most sensitive and advanced instrumentation can be performed reliably in the microgravity environment. For many years, microgravity research was perceived as focused primarily on materials processing. Indeed, the microgravity line item in NASA's budget has even been titled "Materials Processing in Space." Although NASA's microgravity research program certainly includes research conducted on materials science and materials processing, the reality is that this program is much broader in its scope. Specifically, current microgravity research, viewed as a laboratory science, is also broadly directed toward fundamental studies in physics, chemistry, and biology. Access to prolonged periods in space, as well as to other short-duration, ground-based microgravity facilities, is beginning to provide researchers with the opportunity to apply the methods of the physical and biological sciences to a new regime of low-gravity experiments. Thus, the acceleration of gravity is becoming a meaningful, independent, experimental parameter. This approach is analogous to that employed for more than a century in low-temperature physics, in which diverse phenomena are studied in a cryogenic regime where temperature is the primary independent variable that may be set arbitrarily close to zero. In summary, microgravity research involves strong elements of traditional laboratory science, in contrast with the observational science that constitutes most of the NASA space science program. Experiments often involve controlled model systems and exacting parameter settings. Numerous experimental conditions must be explored, and repeat experiments must be conducted for each investigation in order to understand the phenomena of interest and establish, according to scientific standards, the validity and reproducibility of the file:///C|/SSB_old_web/mgoppch1.htm (3 of 6) [6/18/2004 11:15:42 AM]

Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1 data. By contrast, however, the U.S. microgravity research program has produced in its limited experience of in-orbit experimental time only a few score samples and sets of data that meet high scientific standards. This situation is not surprising in view of the fact that humans have been able to make observations in the absence of gravity for less than a quarter of a century and that serious laboratory experiments have been feasible in space for only about 15 years. The decade of the 1990s represents the first phase of experimentation in microgravity and the potential advent of a true laboratory science in space. A number of previous National Research Council (NRC) reports have evaluated the field of microgravity research at different stages of its development. The 1978 report Materials Processing in Space (the "STAMPS" report)1 provided guidance during the program's early years, whereas Space Science in the Twenty-First Century: Imperatives for the Decades 1995 to 20152 attempted to identify future research opportunities. More recently, the 1992 report Toward a Microgravity Research Strategy3 began to lay a foundation for a more mature research program, and the current report is a continuation of that effort. More detailed descriptions of these studies can be found in the preface. Although this report does not provide a complete strategy for microgravity research, it does present some of the important elements of a strategy, including the following: A summary of the current state of knowledge of microgravity science; A discussion of some of the fundamental questions to be answered; A presentation of the goals of the field of microgravity science; The science objectives within each discipline; An evaluation of the potential for microgravity research to provide advances within each discipline; The experimental requirements for achieving the science objectives of each discipline; A description of the other resources required for a successful microgravity science program; and A limited prioritization of research topics within each discipline. The two aspects of a strategy for microgravity research that are not presented in this report are (1) a prioritization of microgravity research objectives across disciplines and (2) a cost-benefit analysis of anticipated microgravity results. Experience has shown how difficult it is to set research priorities, even within a single homogeneous science discipline. Reaching agreement on priorities for file:///C|/SSB_old_web/mgoppch1.htm (4 of 6) [6/18/2004 11:15:42 AM]

Microgravity Research Opportunities for the 1990s: Chapter 1 microgravity research relative to all other science research was judged so unlikely that it was not attempted in this report. The other practical reason that stricter priorities were not set for microgravity research stems from the nature of shuttle flights. Frequently, payloads are assigned to a flight because their requirements for space, power, and so on, fit what is available, and scientific priority per se is less important. No cost-benefit analysis was attempted because the assumption is that orbiting platforms, launched for other purposes, will be available for microgravity research. Decisions on the availability of platforms such as the shuttle or space station are essentially programmatic issues in which microgravity research is only one of many considerations. Furthermore, the cost- benefit of a microgravity program has not been compared to the cost-benefit of experiments on different subjects in the terrestrial environment. Experiments that can be performed adequately under terrestrial gravity conditions, however, are not given a priority for spaceflight in this report. Finally, although the value and need for human intervention capabilities and long-duration flights are noted repeatedly in this report, nothing herein should necessarily be interpreted as advocating or opposing any specific NASA spacecraft or space station design initiative. The remainder of Part I of this report discusses current research opportunities and presents the major conclusions and recommendations of the report. Specific conclusions and recommendations for each of the five disciplines of microgravity research are discussed first and are followed by general recommendations and conclusions that prioritize research issues and provide some general guidance for administrative policy and procedures. Part II presents a status chapter for each of the five scientific disciplines. Chapter 3 discusses the status of fluid and transport science and also serves to introduce the other science sections because fluid flow is a theme common to most of the other areas. Some discussion concerning facilities and research administration is presented in Part III, which covers programmatic issues. REFERENCES 1. Space Science Board, National Research Council. 1978. Materials Processing in Space. National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C. 2. Space Science Board, National Research Council. 1988. Space Science in the Twenty-First Century: Imperatives for the Decades 1995 to 2015. Fundamental Physics and Chemistry. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C. 3. Space Studies Board, National Research Council. 1992. Toward a Microgravity Research Strategy. National Academy Press, Washington, D.C. file:///C|/SSB_old_web/mgoppch1.htm (5 of 6) [6/18/2004 11:15:42 AM]

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